Marx and Russia: The Fate of a Doctrine

Author:   Honorary Professor James D. White (University of Glasgow, UK)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781474224079


Pages:   236
Publication Date:   06 September 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Marx and Russia: The Fate of a Doctrine


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Overview

Marx and Russia is a chronological account of the evolution of Marxist thought from the publication of Das Kapital in Russian translation to the suppression of independent ideological currents by Stalin at the end of the 1920s. The book demonstrates the progressive emergence of different schools of Marxist thinking in the revolutionary era in Russia. Starting from Marx’s own connections with Russian revolutionaries and scholars, James D. White examines the contributions of such figures as Sieber, Plekhanov, Lenin, Bogdanov, Trotsky, Bukharin and Stalin to Marxist ideology in Russia. Using primary documents, biographical sketches and a helpful timeline, the book provides a useful guide for students to orientate themselves among the various Marxist ideologies which they encounter in modern Russian history. White also incorporates valuable new research for Russian history specialists in a vital volume for anyone interested in the history of Marxism, Soviet history and the history of Russia across the modern period.

Full Product Details

Author:   Honorary Professor James D. White (University of Glasgow, UK)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic
Weight:   0.508kg
ISBN:  

9781474224079


ISBN 10:   1474224075
Pages:   236
Publication Date:   06 September 2018
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

This fascinating study should be read by students and scholars of modern Russian history and those with an interest in Marx. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty. * CHOICE * This is a lucid, well-informed, conceptually nuanced, and sensible study of a topic on which these qualities are often in short supply ... This is a fine book, which will be interesting both to specialists and to students seeking a reliable guide to the ways in which Marx's work was understood and misunderstood in Russia. * The Russian Review * In this beautifully written and thoroughly researched tour de force, White presents the findings of a whole life's work on several connected themes: Marx's thought, Marx and Russia, Marx's reception in Russia, the Russian and European revolutionary movement, and the Russian Revolution. With characteristic clarity and wit, White demonstrates how inopportune deaths (Marx, Sieber), left the field open for a fundamental misconception of Marx's work to take hold in Russia via Engels, Plekhanov and Lenin. * Ian D. Thatcher, Professor of History, Ulster University, UK * White is a master of lucid presentation of complex ideas. His new book discusses Karl Marx's (and Friedrich Engels's) thinking on Russia and how the main Russian Marxists (Plekhanov, Lenin, Bogdanov, Trotsky and others) picked up his ideas while providing them with their own twist. The book is packed with new insights and original ideas. It convincingly shows the centrality of Russia in Marx's thought. The study of Russian conditions finally forced him to abandon the idea of capitalism as a universal system destined to absorb the world. The book continues with an elegant expose of the main tenets of the Russian Marxists on workers and intelligentsia; permanent revolution; imperialism; state and democracy; and dialectical philosophy. No doubt, this is the best and most complete introduction to Marxism and Russia in existence. * Erik van Ree, Assistant Professor of European Studies, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands * James White's Marx and Russia is a major and indispensable contribution to the topic of whether the Soviet Union was Marxist . In easy prose, the author provides the reader with the fate of a doctrine in one country that has worldwide implications to this day. * Paul Zarembka, Professor of Economics, State University of New York, USA *


In this beautifully written and thoroughly researched tour de force, White presents the findings of a whole life's work on several connected themes: Marx's thought, Marx and Russia, Marx's reception in Russia, the Russian and European revolutionary movement, and the Russian Revolution. With characteristic clarity and wit, White demonstrates how inopportune deaths (Marx, Sieber), left the field open for a fundamental misconception of Marx's work to take hold in Russia via Engels, Plekhanov and Lenin. * Ian D. Thatcher, Professor of History, Ulster University, UK * White is a master of lucid presentation of complex ideas. His new book discusses Karl Marx's (and Friedrich Engels's) thinking on Russia and how the main Russian Marxists (Plekhanov, Lenin, Bogdanov, Trotsky and others) picked up his ideas while providing them with their own twist. The book is packed with new insights and original ideas. It convincingly shows the centrality of Russia in Marx's thought. The study of Russian conditions finally forced him to abandon the idea of capitalism as a universal system destined to absorb the world. The book continues with an elegant expose of the main tenets of the Russian Marxists on workers and intelligentsia; permanent revolution; imperialism; state and democracy; and dialectical philosophy. No doubt, this is the best and most complete introduction to Marxism and Russia in existence. * Erik van Ree, Assistant Professor of European Studies, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands * James White's Marx and Russia is a major and indispensable contribution to the topic of whether the Soviet Union was Marxist . In easy prose, the author provides the reader with the fate of a doctrine in one country that has worldwide implications to this day. * Paul Zarembka, Professor of Economics, State University of New York, USA *


In this beautifully written and thoroughly researched tour de force, White presents the findings of a whole life's work on several connected themes: Marx's thought, Marx and Russia, Marx's reception in Russia, the Russian and European revolutionary movement, and the Russian Revolution. With characteristic clarity and wit, White demonstrates how inopportune deaths (Marx, Sieber), left the field open for a fundamental misconception of Marx's work to take hold in Russia via Engels, Plekhanov and Lenin. * Ian D. Thatcher, Professor of History, Ulster University, UK * White is a master of lucid presentation of complex ideas. His new book discusses Karl Marx's (and Friedrich Engels's) thinking on Russia and how the main Russian Marxists (Plekhanov, Lenin, Bogdanov, Trotsky and others) picked up his ideas while providing them with their own twist. The book is packed with new insights and original ideas. It convincingly shows the centrality of Russia in Marx's thought. The study of Russian conditions finally forced him to abandon the idea of capitalism as a universal system destined to absorb the world. The book continues with an elegant expose of the main tenets of the Russian Marxists on workers and intelligentsia; permanent revolution; imperialism; state and democracy; and dialectical philosophy. No doubt, this is the best and most complete introduction to Marxism and Russia in existence. * Erik van Ree, Assistant Professor of European Studies, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands * White's Marx and Russia is a major and indispensable contribution to the topic whether the Soviet Union was Marxist . White directs us to Marx's considerable attention to Russian history, including its commune, and to Marx's communications with Russians such as Danielson and Sieber. The French edition of Capital is significant evidence from Marx, who had learned Russian. At least as important for subsequent history is considerable dismissal by Engels of Marx's research on Russia. With Capital receiving its greatest interest there, focus passed to Plekhanov and then on to Lenin, skirting Trotsky after a time. A peculiar Marxism emerged, if contested with Bogdanov as an example, and accelerated into Stalin's ideology. In easy prose, James White provides the reader with the fate of a doctrine in one country that has worldwide implications to this day. * Paul Zarembka, Professor of Economics, State University of New York, USA *


This fascinating study should be read by students and scholars of modern Russian history and those with an interest in Marx. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty. * CHOICE * This is a lucid, well-informed, conceptually nuanced, and sensible study of a topic on which these qualities are often in short supply ... This is a fine book, which will be interesting both to specialists and to students seeking a reliable guide to the ways in which Marx's work was understood and misunderstood in Russia. * The Russian Review * By building on his years of research ... White has produced the best account to date of how Marxist ideas reached and developed in Russia ... Despite the large amount of material written on Lenin, Trotsky and, to a lesser extent, Plekhanov, White's straightforward analysis and lucid writing style keep his discussions of these towering individuals fresh and engaging. * European History Quarterly * In this beautifully written and thoroughly researched tour de force, White presents the findings of a whole life's work on several connected themes: Marx's thought, Marx and Russia, Marx's reception in Russia, the Russian and European revolutionary movement, and the Russian Revolution. With characteristic clarity and wit, White demonstrates how inopportune deaths (Marx, Sieber), left the field open for a fundamental misconception of Marx's work to take hold in Russia via Engels, Plekhanov and Lenin. * Ian D. Thatcher, Professor of History, Ulster University, UK * White is a master of lucid presentation of complex ideas. His new book discusses Karl Marx's (and Friedrich Engels's) thinking on Russia and how the main Russian Marxists (Plekhanov, Lenin, Bogdanov, Trotsky and others) picked up his ideas while providing them with their own twist. The book is packed with new insights and original ideas. It convincingly shows the centrality of Russia in Marx's thought. The study of Russian conditions finally forced him to abandon the idea of capitalism as a universal system destined to absorb the world. The book continues with an elegant expose of the main tenets of the Russian Marxists on workers and intelligentsia; permanent revolution; imperialism; state and democracy; and dialectical philosophy. No doubt, this is the best and most complete introduction to Marxism and Russia in existence. * Erik van Ree, Assistant Professor of European Studies, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands * James White's Marx and Russia is a major and indispensable contribution to the topic of whether the Soviet Union was Marxist . In easy prose, the author provides the reader with the fate of a doctrine in one country that has worldwide implications to this day. * Paul Zarembka, Professor of Economics, State University of New York, USA *


This fascinating study should be read by students and scholars of modern Russian history and those with an interest in Marx. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty. * CHOICE * This is a lucid, well-informed, conceptually nuanced, and sensible study of a topic on which these qualities are often in short supply ... This is a fine book, which will be interesting both to specialists and to students seeking a reliable guide to the ways in which Marx's work was understood and misunderstood in Russia. * The Russian Review * By building on his years of research ... White has produced the best account to date of how Marxist ideas reached and developed in Russia ... Despite the large amount of material written on Lenin, Trotsky and, to a lesser extent, Plekhanov, White's straightforward analysis and lucid writing style keep his discussions of these towering individuals fresh and engaging. * European History Quarterly * An excellent survey of an important historical theme. * Socialist History * In this beautifully written and thoroughly researched tour de force, White presents the findings of a whole life's work on several connected themes: Marx's thought, Marx and Russia, Marx's reception in Russia, the Russian and European revolutionary movement, and the Russian Revolution. With characteristic clarity and wit, White demonstrates how inopportune deaths (Marx, Sieber), left the field open for a fundamental misconception of Marx's work to take hold in Russia via Engels, Plekhanov and Lenin. * Ian D. Thatcher, Professor of History, Ulster University, UK * White is a master of lucid presentation of complex ideas. His new book discusses Karl Marx's (and Friedrich Engels's) thinking on Russia and how the main Russian Marxists (Plekhanov, Lenin, Bogdanov, Trotsky and others) picked up his ideas while providing them with their own twist. The book is packed with new insights and original ideas. It convincingly shows the centrality of Russia in Marx's thought. The study of Russian conditions finally forced him to abandon the idea of capitalism as a universal system destined to absorb the world. The book continues with an elegant expose of the main tenets of the Russian Marxists on workers and intelligentsia; permanent revolution; imperialism; state and democracy; and dialectical philosophy. No doubt, this is the best and most complete introduction to Marxism and Russia in existence. * Erik van Ree, Assistant Professor of European Studies, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands * James White's Marx and Russia is a major and indispensable contribution to the topic of whether the Soviet Union was Marxist . In easy prose, the author provides the reader with the fate of a doctrine in one country that has worldwide implications to this day. * Paul Zarembka, Professor of Economics, State University of New York, USA *


Author Information

James D. White is Honorary Professor in the Department of Central and East European Studies at the University of Glasgow, UK. He is the author of Red Hamlet: The Life and Ideas of Alexander Bogdanov (2018), Lenin: The Practice and Theory of Revolution (2001), Karl Marx and the Intellectual Origins of Dialectical Materialism (1996) and The Russian Revolution 1917-1921 (1994).

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