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Karl Marx's Theory of Revolution I / 1, State and bureaucracy / State and bureaucracy / 1,

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Draper, Hal (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: New York : Monthly Review Press, [1977]
Colección:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Contents; BOOK I; Foreword; 1. Politics; 2. Class; 3. Marx; 4. Method; 5. Engels; 6. Format; The scope of forthcoming volumes; PART I: THE POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT OF THE YOUNG MARX; 1. The Democratic Extremist; 1. State and civil society in Hegelese; 2. The winds of freedom; 3. The ""freedom of the press"" articles; 4. The subject: democratic rights in general; 5. Marx rejects the liberal opposition; 6. Marx rejects the bourgeois approach to democracy; 7. Against bureaucratic (state) control of the mind; 8. Freedom means democratic control from below; 9. The dialectics of ends and means
  • 10. Not only with lances11. Through bourgeois democracy-and beyond; 2. The Political Apprentice; 1. The shift in orientation; 2. Wood theft and the state; 3. Through social reality to theory; 3. Emancipation from Hegel; 1. Inverting Hegel; 2. The state and private property; 3. The state and the bureaucracy; 4. Political lexicon: democracy; 5. The state and democracy; 6. Democracy and revolution; 7. The break with Hegel; 4. The New Direction; 1. Political lexicon: socialism and communism; 2. How to develop a movement program; 3. Toward the politicalization of socialism
  • 5. Implementing the New Direction1. The Jewish emancipation question; 2. Marx on Jewish emancipation; 3. Political emancipation as a stage; 4. ""Human emancipation"" as the end; 5. Bauer: round two; 6. Dissolving the Jew-Christian antithesis; 7. Third round with Bauer; 6. Orientation Toward the Proletariat; 1. Political lexicon: proletariat; 2. The ambiguity of pointing; 3. The road to the new orientation; 4. The impact of Paris; 5. ""Practicals"" and philosophers; 6. New concept of the universal class; 7. The proletariat as ""universal class""; 8. Philosophy and the proletariat
  • 7. Toward a Theory of the Proletariat1. Engels' contribution; 2. From Barmen to Manchester; 3. Reports from another world; 4. Engels' first period in Manchester; 5. On Carlyle; 6. First step in political economy; 7. Enter: the class struggle; 8. New concept of alienated labor; 8. Toward a Class Theory of the State; 1. The shell of Hegelian state theory; 2. Breaking the shell; 3. Lightning flash from Silesia; 4. First reaction: antistatism; 5. Engels takes the lead; 6. Engels in Elberfeld; 7. Prelude in Brussels; 8. The first ""Marxist"" work; 9. Character and Revolution; 1. Of demons
  • 2. Of Siegfried and other heroes3. Of savior-rulers; 4. Of Prometheus and princes; 5. Of the servile state; 6. Of a thinker who dreams; 10. Toward the Principle of Self-Emancipation; 1. The Acherontic danger; 2. The education of Engels; 3. The active element of emancipation; 4. Elitism versus the masses; 5. Marx's attack on philosophical elitism; 6. Sue's Les Mysteres de Paris; 7. The savior from above as despot; 8. The thesis on revolutionary practice; PART II: THE THEORY OF THE STATE; 11. The State and Society; 1. Political and protopolitical authority; 2. The state separates out