Socialist Thought: A Documentary History

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Albert Fried, Ronald Sanders
Columbia University Press, 1992 - 619 páginas

In Socialist Thought Fried and Sanders set socialism within its historical context from pre-revolutionary France to the present by using major turning points such as 1789, when the French Revolution launched socialism, to establish a chronological framework. The authors contend that though its roots can be traced to the Bible, socialism truly came into being at the end of the 18th century, the age of democratic ideas, as a response to the Industrial Revolution and an attempt to change the consciousness of society and its material organization.

 

Contenido

Utopian Socialism
72
The Emergence of the Proletariat
185
Early German Socialism
238
Marx and Engels
276
Theses on Feuerbach
292
Inaugural Address of the Workingmens Interna
300
Engelss Explanation of Capital
306
To F Bolte November 23 1871
314
Revisionism
375
Bolshevism
446
Two View
511
The Future of Socialism
528
Newer Currents in Socialist Thought
542
Cornel West
583
Samir Amin
604
Bibliography
617

To F Mehring July 14 1893
324
Anarchism
328

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