Marx, Lenin, and the Revolutionary Experience: Studies of Communism and Radicalism in an Age of Globalization

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Routledge, 3 jun 2014 - 352 páginas
Marx, Lenin, and the Revolutionary Experience offers a fresh look at Communism, both the bad and good, and also touches on anarchism, Christian theory, conservatism, liberalism, Marxism, and more, to argue for the enduring relevance of Karl Marx, and V.I. Lenin as democratic revolutionaries. It examines the "Red Decade" of the 1930s and the civil rights movement and the New Left of the 1960s in the United States as well.

Studying the past to grapple with issues of war and terrorism, exploitation, hunger, ecological crisis, and trends toward deadening "de-spiritualization", the book shows how the revolutionaries of the past are still relevant to today's struggles. It offers a clearly written and carefully reasoned thematic discussion of globalization, Marxism, Christianity (and religion in general), Communism, the history of the USSR and US radical and social movements.
 

Índice

Introduction
1
Chapter 1 Marxs Manifesto after Communisms Collapse
15
Chapter 2 The Kingdom of God
49
Chapter 3 Lenin Who Cares?
77
Chapter 4 From Lenin to Stalin and Back
101
Chapter 5 The Red Decade
153
Chapter 6 The Anarchist Challenge
199
Chapter 7 Tree of Life
221
Endnotes
259
Bibliography
295
Index
321
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Sobre el autor (2014)

Paul LeBlanc is the Dean of the School of Arts and Sciences and Associate Professor of History at La Roche College in Pittsburgh, PA.

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