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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2018

Pages: 153-165

Series: Studies in East European Thought

Full citation:

Katerina Clark, "Rosa Luxemburg, "The Russian revolution"", Studies in East European Thought 70, 2018, pp. 153-165.

Rosa Luxemburg, "The Russian revolution"

Katerina Clark

pp. 153-165

in: Studies in East European Thought 70, 2018.

Abstract

The essay concerns the highly controversial pamphlet of Rosa Luxemburg The Russian Revolution (1918/1922), in which Luxemburg criticizes Lenin's post-revolutionary policies, in particular his dissolution of the Constituent Assembly, an elected body. The essay reviews the history of the text's publication and the intense debate, which continues to this day, over whether or not Luxemburg changed her mind on its central critique. At stake in the argument is not only Luxemburg's evaluation of Lenin's actions but also the correct weighting to be given to the two components in the central Marxist–Leninist dialectic of revolution: spontaneity and consciousness. In elaborating this point the essay brings in examples from the writings of Lukács and Stalin, and also discusses the dialectic's centrality in socialist realism.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2018

Pages: 153-165

Series: Studies in East European Thought

Full citation:

Katerina Clark, "Rosa Luxemburg, "The Russian revolution"", Studies in East European Thought 70, 2018, pp. 153-165.