Rosa Luxemburg, Volume 2

Front Cover
Oxford U.P., 1966 - Communism - 984 pages
The inspirational power of Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) remains as important today as it was in her lifetime. An uncompromising, original thinker and revolutionary activist, Luxemburg's efforts to develop an emancipatory version of Marxism through her involvement with Polish, Russian and German Social Democratic parties and then the Spartacist League ensured her position as an influential force, yet resulted in her brutal murder during the January 1919 uprising in Berlin. J. P. Nettl's biography was first published half a century ago and remains the most detailed and comprehensive study of Rosa Luxemburg to date. His extensive knowledge of the social and political context of the European socialist movements in which she was active, and his engagement with her voluminous writings in German, Polish, and Russian (many of which are only now being translated into English), brings to light the multidimensional nature of her life and work. This new edition will enable a new generation to explore Luxemburg's political and activist work, as well as grasp the unique personality of this remarkable woman, theoretician and revolutionary.

Contents

IN OPPOSITION 19111914
451
RETURN TO THE OFFENSIVETHE TRANSITION
493
POLES AND RUSSIANS 19071914
548
THE WAR
601
PRISON IN GERMANY REVOLUTION IN RUSSIA
653
IRRESISTIBLE FORCE AND IMMOVABLE OBJECT
737
LUXEMBURGISMWEAPON AND MYTH
787
THE NATIONAL QUESTION
842
BIBLIOGRAPHY
863

Other editions - View all

Bibliographic information