Lenin's Interventionist Marxism by Tom Freeman

Lenin's Interventionist Marxism by Tom Freeman

Author:Tom Freeman [Freeman, Tom]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Tags: Political Science, Political Ideologies, Communism; Post-Communism & Socialism
ISBN: 9780994537812
Google: 1wr-nQAACAAJ
Barnesnoble:
Goodreads: 35692475
Publisher: Interventions
Published: 2017-01-01T00:00:00+00:00


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1 See for example Kochakov (ed.) 1956, pp20, 25, 32.

2 ibid., p44.

3 ibid., p35.

4 On Sovremennik and its role see ibid., pp27-30.

5 On Chernyshevskii and his role see ibid., pp22-4. Venturi describes Chernyshevskii as the “politician of populism” who “not only gave it ideas but inspired its main course of action” (Venturi 1966, p129). He devotes a chapter to Chernyshevskii’s role in the development of Populism (pp129-86). On the development of Chernyshevskii’s writing in Sovremennik see ibid., pp 145-74.

6 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, pp39-40.

7 ibid., p295. For a discussion of Chernyshevskii’s early intellectual development and his relation to Hegel and the utopian socialists see Venturi 1966, pp134-42.

8 For a summary of early Populist reactions to Marx and Engels see Offord 1986, pp117-20.

9 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, pp55-7.

10 ibid., pp255-6.

11 These attempts corresponded with a return to passivity and tsarist control in the countryside after a period of protest (Venturi 1966, pp208-19).

12 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, pp247-51, Venturi 1966, pp225-31.

13 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, p260.

14 ibid., p258.

15 ibid., p257.

16 ibid., p260.

17 See for example ibid., pp238-9.

18 ibid., pp266, 270-1, 290-1.

19 ibid., pp276-7.

20 ibid., p287.

21 On Lenin’s ongoing interest in and veneration of Chernyshevskii, and the novel What is to be done? in particular, see Offord 1986, pp150-1.

22 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, p295. For a discussion of nature and significance of strikes in the 1870s see pp301-3.

23 ibid., pp308-9. For the leadership and nature of this movement see Venturi 1966, pp469-506.

24 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, p304.

25 ibid., p306.

26 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, pp295-6, Zakharov (ed.) 1980, pp19, 24.

27 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, pp298-300, Zhuikov (ed.) 1977, p23.

28 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, pp319-23, Diakin et al. 1972, p153, Zakharov (ed.) 1980, p20, Zhuikov (ed.) 1977, p20, for a discussion of attempts by various individuals to establish groups.

29 See Kochakov (ed.) 1956, pp323-4 for a discussion of these libraries as well as the growing assertiveness of workers. See also Diakin et al. 1972, p154. On the role of travel of workers see the example of the worker leader Obnorskii in Zhuikov (ed.) 1977, p23.

30 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, p332, Zhuikov 1975, pp20-3. On the course and significance of developments that led to the foundation of Land and Freedom see Venturi 1966, pp558-74; see pp73-4 for a section of a programmatic statement.

31 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, p333. On the pioneering work by the “Chaikovskist” populists among workers see Venturi 1966, pp507-57.

32 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, pp334-7, Diakin et al. 1972, p157.

33 For a short extract of some of his arguments see Venturi 1966, pp625-6.

34 Zhuikov 1975, p57. See Offord 1986, pp26-7. Venturi 1966, pp653-65 for the process of the split and the initial positions of Black Repartition.

35 Kochakov (ed.) 1956, p352, Diakin et al. 1972, p165. Offord 1986, pp51-6. Venturi 1966, pp700-8 gives an account of work by the terrorist-oriented People’s Freedom among workers.

36 Perhaps most notably in his reply to a letter from Zasulich in 1881 (Zhuikov 1975, p79). For an English language discussion of Marx and Engels’ views see Offord 1986, pp120-5.

37 Zhuikov 1975, pp63-79.

38 Principally in Socialism and Political Struggle (1883) and Our Differences (1885) which made a deep impression in St.



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