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2024, Alternative per il socialismo, No. 72
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7 pages
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On the centenary of his birth, who remembers Lenin, even in that part of the world that had transformed him in an icon? In this sense Lenin is a tragic icon. From 1902 when with his What to do? he gave identity to his 'Bolshevik' party and up to the 1923 essay Better less but better, which laid down the conditions for running power: his actions and thinking have a tragic significance, for how they were disregarded-first by those who took over his role after him, in his country-and then in those parts of the world attracted by the Russian '17. The USSR-and not Lenin-served as a reference for men and countries where social conflicts were attempted and where the political system allows the activity of socialist and communist parties.
Мир России, 2020
Citation: Marshall A. (2020) The Shadow and the Substance of Lenin after 150 Years. Mir Rossii, vol. 29, no 4, pp. 134–149. DOI: 10.17323/1811-038X-2020-29-4-134-149 150 years since Lenin’s birth marks an anniversary that raises questions around Lenin’s meaning today and his ultimate historical legacy. By distinguishing both Lenin the man, and the cult of commemoration that for 60 years surrounded him, from the core method behind Lenin’s own thought, this article addresses the question of if and why Lenin still matters in Europe today. It does so by arguing for an Ilyenkovian reading of Lenin’s main ideas and contributions. The current condition of European politics is, to a significant degree, still a by-product of the rejection of ‘Leninism’ after 1989, Leninism having evolved after 1924 into a sociological construct designed predominantly to facilitate the accelerated industrialization of backward societies. The rejection of Leninism as an alternate form of modernity led, via a c...
The main issue of the paper is establishing the role and the circumstances of the great Soviet ruler embalmment, seen as a replacement for the religious relics in the Soviet anti-religious campaign and as an establishment of a new cult of political personality. The idea of embalmment and of mausoleum for Lenin's body was presented as being the idea of the masses, while it was the idea of a small group of political leaders in order to impose a political symbol and to establish a new type of "relic" as a center for "political worship", contributting to reshaping the mentality of the new-born "Soviet people" and their sense of new type of "spiritual membership" to the Soviet community. The burial issue of V. I. Lenin is analyzed throughout the decades, mentioning the main arguments in this ardent discussion. The nowadays conflict between "Orthodox monarchists" and communists is just an example of the continuous burial issue, including all other corpses buried near the mausoleum with Lenin. Another analyzed factor is the nowadays status of Lenin's mausoleum in a context of Russian spiritual and national revival. The role of a Soviet proeminent political figure is still a matter for discussion in the nowadays Russian culture in search for the Russian spirit among the reminiscences of socialist and communist propaganda.
Platypus Review, 2011
The principal mistake made by those who contemplate Lenin's political thought and action is due to assumptions that are made about the relation of socialism to democracy. Lenin was not an “undemocratic socialist” or one who prioritized socialism as an “end” over the “means” of democracy. Lenin did not think that once a majority of workers was won to socialist revolution democracy was finished. Lenin was not an authoritarian socialist. Socialism is meant to transcend liberalism by fulfilling it.[2] The problem with liberalism is not its direction, supposedly different from socialism, but rather that it does not go far enough. Socialism is not anti-liberal. The 20th century antinomy of socialism versus liberalism, as expressed in Isaiah Berlin’s counterposing of “positive and negative freedoms” or “freedom to [social benefits] versus freedom from [the state],” or the idea that social justice conflicts with liberty, travesties (and naturalizes) and thus degrades the actual problem, which is not a clash of timeless principles—liberalism versus democracy—but a historically specific contradiction of capitalism. To clarify this, it is necessary to return to a Marxist approach, such as Lenin’s. The error consists of addressing a dialectical approach to politics such as Lenin’s in an undialectical and eclectic manner, as if there were a number of criteria to be checked off (anticapitalism, democracy, etc.), rather than a set of intrinsically interrelated historical problems to be worked through together. The actual dialectic of the historically interrelated developments of capitalism, democracy, and the struggle for socialism demands a dialectical approach in both practice and theory. The reason that various moments of Lenin’s thought and action can appear contradictory is due to an undialectical interpretation of Lenin, not to Lenin himself. Lenin is subject to the same interpretive problem as Marx: the question of Lenin cuts to the heart of Marxism.
The Bullet, 2020
No one probably influenced world history more than he did: Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, or more simply, Lenin. Only Karl Marx, Martin Luther, or Mohammed may dispute Lenin for this title. Lenin dedicated his whole life to revolution, a world revolution. He failed to go global, but the revolution which he led soon stretched across one sixth of the globe and inspired, sometimes ill-fatedly, revolutionary upheavals around the world, which would eventually turn his writings into doctrines in a third of the planet’s nation-states. Until some decades ago, Lenin’s words – or rather, the specific interpretations of his words taken out of context – were law in the mass communist parties of both East and West. With the collapse of state socialism, Marxism-Leninism as a doctrine also broke down. Among the Marxist-oriented left in the West, not only Marxism-Leninism but also Lenin himself as a thinker disappeared. If one had previously read Lenin’s works as revelation, one no longer read them at all. There are good reasons for speaking against Marxism-Leninism, from its function in securing the Soviet Union under Stalin, to the loss of autonomy of the socialist-revolutionary movements in the West and the resulting vulgarization of Marxism. It is worth (re-)reading Lenin. Not only are many of the questions he asked still highly topical, but the answers Lenin developed to these questions can still tell us something today. To read Lenin’s works exegetically like scripture is wrong. But not to read Lenin because he was once read this way, however, is a fundamental error of political judgement. So let us take a closer look at a number – organized here under twenty-one points – of Lenin’s central contentions. What is Lenin's legacy and what is and what isn't useful for understanding and changing the world today?
Canadian Journal of History, 2003
health sciences, history THE CANADIAN HISTORICAL REVIEW utpjournals.press/chr Offering a comprehensive analysis on the events that have shaped Canada, CHR publishes articles that examine Canadian history from both a multicultural and multidisciplinary perspective.
2016
Lenin was a revolutionary Marxist theoretician and politician who many would claim to play an enormous role in the birth and development of the Soviet Union. Yet, his role is often subjected to many contestations, especially in regards to the practicality of his policy ideas, his motives and leadership style. This essay intends to focus on three contention points: elitism and dictatorship in Bolshevik “democratic centralism”, the New Economic Policy and conclude with the debate on Lenin’s role in Stalin’s succession as the Soviet Union’s leader by closely examining two well-known biographies, Lenin: A Biography by Robert Service and Reconstructing Lenin: An Intellectual Biography by Tamas Krausz.
Even though Gorbachev was considered a hero in Western Europe and North America, he did not get the recognition and adoration, in the USSR, he felt he deserved. Gorbachev did not get this recognition and adoration for a multitude of reasons; He comes to power at a time where the Russian people are just learning to express opposition and get results, he tries to revive socialist ideals during a democratic revolution, and Gorbachev and the Russian people do not see the results from his reform and direction as much as they did they results of the reforms and directions of the successors previous, Lenin and Stalin. Though the reign of Lenin and Stalin were harsh, they managed to gain die-hard followers regardless of the evils they committed because they lead the country through intense hardships, made sacrifices for the better of the cause and implanted "the idea of community was more important; that way the physical unit lasted eternally." 1 To follow these men in succession and make an image and a name for one's self, one the people recognize and adore, would be the challenge of a lifetime.
Platypus Review, 2020
Presented at a Platypus teach-in on the 150th anniversary of Lenin’s birth, April 22, 2020. Video recording available online at: <https://youtu.be/01z8Mzz2IY4>. ON THE OCCASION OF THE 150TH ANNIVERSARY OF LENIN’S BIRTH, I would like to approach Lenin’s meaning today by critically examining an essay written by the liberal political philosopher Ralph Miliband on the occasion of Lenin’s 100th birthday in 1970 — which was the year of my own birth. The reason for using Miliband’s essay to frame my discussion of Lenin’s legacy is that the DSA Democratic Socialists of America magazine Jacobin republished Miliband, who is perhaps their most important theoretical inspiration, in 2018 as a belated treatment of the 100th anniversary of the Russian Revolution of 1917 — or perhaps as a way of marking the centenary of the ill-fated German Revolution of 1918, which failed as a socialist revolution but is usually regarded as a successful democratic revolution, issuing in the Weimar Republic under the leadership of the SPD Social-Democratic Party of Germany. There is a wound in the apparent conflict between the desiderata of socialism and democracy, in which the Russian tradition associated with Lenin is opposed to and by the German tradition associated with social democracy, or, alternatively, “democratic socialism,” by contrast with the supposedly undemocratic socialism of Lenin, however justified or not by “Russian conditions.” The German model seems to stand for conditions more appropriate to advanced capitalist and liberal democratic countries.
Platypus Review, 2011
Lenin’s Marxist politics has been profoundly misconstrued and distorted, both positively and negatively, as supposedly having wanted to strip capitalist society of its deceptive veneer and assert the unadorned proletariat as the be-all and end-all of “socialist” society. Certainly not merely the later Stalinist history of the Soviet Union, but also practices of the Soviet state under Lenin’s leadership in the Civil War, so-called “War Communism,” and the Red Terror, lent themselves to a belief in Lenin as a ruthless destroyer of “bourgeois” conditions of life. But, then, what are we to make, for instance, of Lenin’s pamphlets on The State and Revolution (1917) and “Left-Wing” Communism: An Infantile Disorder (1920)? For they emphasized both the necessary persistence of “bourgeois right” among the workers in the long transition from socialism to communism, requiring the continuation of state mediation, and the fact that Marxists had understood their effort as trying to overcome capital “on the basis of capitalism” itself. A prime example of Lenin’s insistence on the mediation of politics in society was his opposition to Trotsky’s recommendation that labor unions be militarized and subsumed under the state. Lenin wanted to preserve, rather, the important non-identity of class, party, and state in the Soviet “workers’ state,” which he recognized as necessarily carrying on, for the foreseeable future, “state capitalism” (characterized by “bureaucratic deformations” due to Russian conditions). Lenin thus wanted to preserve the possibility of politics within the working class, a theme that reached back to his first major pamphlet, What is to be Done? (1902). Lenin’s “last struggle” was to prevent the strangling of politics in the Soviet state, a danger he regarded not merely in terms of Stalin’s leadership, but the condition of the Bolsheviks more generally.
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