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Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
PERMANENT REVOLUTION PREFACE AMERICAN EDITION As THIS book goes to
press in the English language, the whole thinking part of the
international working class, and in a sense, the whole of civilized
humanity, listens with particularly keen interest to the
reverberations of the economic turn taking place on the part of the
former czarist empire. The greatest attention in this connection is
aroused by the problem of collectivizing the peasant hold ings. And
no wonder in this sphere the break with the past assumes a
particularly clear-cut character. But a correct evaluation of
collectivization is unthinkable without a general conception of the
socialist revolution. And here on an even higher plane, we are
again convinced that everything in the field of Marxian theory is
bound up with practical activity. The most remote, and it would
seem, abstract disagreements, if they are thought out to the end,
will sooner or later be expressed in practise, and the latter
allows not a single theoretical mistake to be made with impunity.
The collectivization of peasant holdings is, it is under stood, the
most necessary and fundamental part of the socialist transformation
of society. The volume and tempo of collectivization, however, are
not only determined by the governments will but, in the final
analysis, by the economic factors by the height of the countrys
economic level, the relationship between industry and agriculture
PERMANENT REVOLUTION and consequently by the technical resources of
agriculture itself. Industrialization is the motive force of the
whole newer culture and, by that, the only conceivable basis of
socialism. In the conditions of the Soviet Union, indus
trialization means first of allthe strengthening of the base of the
proletariat as a ruling class. Simultaneously, it creates the
material and technical premises for the collec tivization of
agriculture. The tempos of both these pro cesses are
interdependent. The proletariat is interested in the highest tempos
for these processes, in so far as the new society that is to be
created is thus best protected from external danger, and at the
same time creates a source for systematically improving the
material level of the toiling masses. However, the tempo that can
be accomplished is limited by the whole material and cultural
position of the country, by the mutual relationship between the
city and village and by the most urgent needs of the masses, who
can sacri fice their today for the sake of tomorrow only up to a
certain point. The best and most advantageous tempos are those
which not only produce the most rapid develop ment of industry and
collectivization at the given moment, but secure the necessary
resistance - of the social regime, that is, first of all the
strengthening of the alliance of the workers and peasants, which
alone prepares the possibility of further successes. From this
point of view, the general historical criterion by which the party
and state leadership directs the development of industry as planned
economy assumes decisive significance. Here two principal variants
are possible a the course described above towards the economic
entrenchment of the proletarian dictatorship in one country until
further victories of the international proletariat revolution the
viewpoint of the Left Opposi tion b the course towards the
construction of an isolated national socialist society and at that
in the shortestPREFACE, historical time the present official
viewpoint. These are two distinct, and in the final analysis,
directly opposed theoretical conceptions of socialism. Out of these
flow basically different strategy and tactics. In the limits of
this foreword we cannot consider anew the question of the
cofcstruction of socialism in one country, Other of our works are
devoted to this, particularly The Criticism of the Draft Program of
the Comintern. Here we limit ourselves to the fundamental elements
of the question...
Many of the earliest books, particularly those dating back to the
1900s and before, are now extremely scarce and increasingly
expensive. We are republishing these classic works in affordable,
high quality, modern editions, using the original text and artwork.
This book by Leon Trotsky makes a profound analysis and evaluation
of Stalinism and the Soviet burreacracy. It was written in 1936
before Trotsky was murdered in Mexico by Stalin's secret police.
Trotsky's thinking prophesied the collapse of the Soviet Union 60
years before it happened. This collapse was instigated by the
buffon and drunk Boris Yeltsin as his leadership has led to the
'new oligarchy' in Russia. Trotsky was a very important leader in
the October Revolution and it is thought that Lenin wanted him to
take the leadership rather than the tyrant Stalin. This book is
very impotant reading to everyone interest in Marxist theory and
the history of Russia. A Collector's Edition.
The Real Situation in Russia, first published in 1928, contains
three of Trotsky's harshest rebuttals of Stalin's takeover of the
Russian Revolution following the death of Lenin. The first part
contains a defence of the 'Opposition Platform' against the
Stalinist denunciation; the second details Trotsky's view of the
precise nature of the Stalinist program, as well as its disastrous
consequences for Russia; and the third demonstrates the unashamed
falsification of the history by Stalin with regard to the beginning
of the Revolution. Including a sympathetic, but nonetheless astute,
introduction to Trotsky's argument by the translator, The Real
Situation in Russia will prove to be of value to all students of
twentieth-century Marxism, and in particular to those interested in
the Russian Revolution - not only its origins and early
development, but also, perhaps, the reasons for its ultimate
failure.
The Defence of Terrorism, originally written in 1920 on a military
train during the Russian Civil War, represents one of Trotsky's
most wide-ranging and original contributions to the debates that
dominated the 1920s and '30s. Trotsky's intention is "far away from
any thought of defending terrorism in general". Rather, he seeks to
promote an historical justification for the Revolution, by
demonstrating that history has set up the 'revolutionary violence
of the progressive class' against the 'conservative violence of the
outworn classes'. The argument is developed in response to the
influential Marxist intellectual Karl Kautsky, who refuted
Trotsky's 'militarisation of labour' and Lenin's wholesale
rejection of a 'bloodless revolution'. The introduction, written
for the second edition of 1935, presents Trotsky's reflections on
the similarities between Kautsky and the burgeoning British Labour
Party: specifically, it recapitulates Trotsky's belief that
revolution conducted according to the norms of Parliamentarianism
is no revolution at all.
The Real Situation in Russia, first published in 1928, contains
three of Trotsky's harshest rebuttals of Stalin's takeover of the
Russian Revolution following the death of Lenin. The first part
contains a defence of the 'Opposition Platform' against the
Stalinist denunciation; the second details Trotsky's view of the
precise nature of the Stalinist program, as well as its disastrous
consequences for Russia; and the third demonstrates the unashamed
falsification of the history by Stalin with regard to the beginning
of the Revolution. Including a sympathetic, but nonetheless astute,
introduction to Trotsky's argument by the translator, The Real
Situation in Russia will prove to be of value to all students of
twentieth-century Marxism, and in particular to those interested in
the Russian Revolution - not only its origins and early
development, but also, perhaps, the reasons for its ultimate
failure.
The Defence of Terrorism, originally written in 1920 on a military
train during the Russian Civil War, represents one of Trotsky's
most wide-ranging and original contributions to the debates that
dominated the 1920s and '30s. Trotsky's intention is "far away from
any thought of defending terrorism in general". Rather, he seeks to
promote an historical justification for the Revolution, by
demonstrating that history has set up the 'revolutionary violence
of the progressive class' against the 'conservative violence of the
outworn classes'. The argument is developed in response to the
influential Marxist intellectual Karl Kautsky, who refuted
Trotsky's 'militarisation of labour' and Lenin's wholesale
rejection of a 'bloodless revolution'. The introduction, written
for the second edition of 1935, presents Trotsky's reflections on
the similarities between Kautsky and the burgeoning British Labour
Party: specifically, it recapitulates Trotsky's belief that
revolution conducted according to the norms of Parliamentarianism
is no revolution at all.
First Published in 1926, Where is Britain Going? focuses on the
historical factors and circumstances which were to define Britain's
development in the midst of social unrest at that time. The book
considers the future of Britain in an age when the working classes
were being driven into confrontation with the state under the
impact of the world crisis of capitalism. Writing over eighty years
ago, Trotsky concentrates on the decline of British imperialism in
his analysis of the Bolshevik Revolution. In a brilliant polemic
that exposes all the treachery of the Labour leaders in the year
before the General strike, he recalls the revolutionary traditions
of the working class and draws on the historical lessons of the
English Civil War and Chartism. Rejecting the parliamentary road
and stripping bare the pretensions of Fabian socialism, Where is
Britain going? outlines perspectives of revolution which continue
to retain their validity.
First Published in 1926, Towards Socialism or Capitalism? considers
how the socialised economy of Soviet Russia, isolated in a
capitalist world after Lenin's death, faced acute dangers. Trotsky
and the Left Opposition alone fought the Stalinist degeneration of
the state and party apparatus which threatened to open the door to
capitalist restoration. The three articles in this book, written
between 1925 and 1932, discuss the fundamental problems of the
Soviet economy from the New Economic Policy to forced
collectivization. Published here in one volume, they are
indispensable steps in the development of Trotsky's analysis of the
Soviet Union, laid down in 1936 in 'The Revolution Betrayed'.
When Lenin died and the Russian Revolution began to devour its
leaders, Trotsky survived longer than most as an exile in Mexico,
until his assassination in 1940. The Essential Trotsky, first
published in 1963, demonstrates the significance of this innovative
and radical thinker's contribution to the Bolshevik success, the
magnetism of his personality, and also a certain tragic heroism
discernible throughout his life. The History of the Russian
Revolution to Brest-Litovsk was written immediately after the
events it describes, when Trotsky was attending the negotiations
that extracted Russia from the First World War; The Lessons of
October, an answer to his opponents in 1924, matches Lenin in power
of analysis; and Stalin Falsifies History, written in 1927,
presents the beginning of the distorting process by which Stalin
secured his position, and defeated a range of attitudes, many more
benign than his own, towards the future of the Revolution. This is
a fascinating reissue that will be of value to students with an
interest in early-twentieth century Russia, the Russian Revolution
and the writings of Trotsky more generally.
When Lenin died and the Russian Revolution began to devour its
leaders, Trotsky survived longer than most as an exile in Mexico,
until his assassination in 1940. The Essential Trotsky, first
published in 1963, demonstrates the significance of this innovative
and radical thinker's contribution to the Bolshevik success, the
magnetism of his personality, and also a certain tragic heroism
discernible throughout his life. The History of the Russian
Revolution to Brest-Litovsk was written immediately after the
events it describes, when Trotsky was attending the negotiations
that extracted Russia from the First World War; The Lessons of
October, an answer to his opponents in 1924, matches Lenin in power
of analysis; and Stalin Falsifies History, written in 1927,
presents the beginning of the distorting process by which Stalin
secured his position, and defeated a range of attitudes, many more
benign than his own, towards the future of the Revolution. This is
a fascinating reissue that will be of value to students with an
interest in early-twentieth century Russia, the Russian Revolution
and the writings of Trotsky more generally.
Leon Trotsky's 1905 - despite long being out of print - has
remained the central point of reference for those looking to
understand the rising of workers, peasants and soldiers that nearly
unseated the Tsar in 1905. Trotsky's elegant, beautifully written
account draws on his experience as a key leader of the revolution.
First Published in 1926, Towards Socialism or Capitalism? considers
how the socialised economy of Soviet Russia, isolated in a
capitalist world after Lenin's death, faced acute dangers. Trotsky
and the Left Opposition alone fought the Stalinist degeneration of
the state and party apparatus which threatened to open the door to
capitalist restoration. The three articles in this book, written
between 1925 and 1932, discuss the fundamental problems of the
Soviet economy from the New Economic Policy to forced
collectivization. Published here in one volume, they are
indispensable steps in the development of Trotsky's analysis of the
Soviet Union, laid down in 1936 in 'The Revolution Betrayed'.
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