Fr. 42.90

The Workers' Way to Freedom - and Other Council Communist Writings

English · Paperback / Softback

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Anton Pannekoek (1873-1960), the Dutch astronomer and Marxist revolutionary, was a key theoretician of council communism-a Marxist alternative to both Leninism and Social Democracy that instead emphasized working-class self-emancipation through workers' councils.

The first half of this book walks the reader through the fundamentals of council communism and the conditions that led to the development of these ideas. The second half of the book demonstrates the rich depth of Pannekoek's thinking, with penetrating essays and insightful letters on revolutionary organization, state capitalism, Marxism, the limitations of trade unions and political parties, the potential of wildcat strikes, public vs. common ownership, the necessity of combining organization and freedom, the deceptiveness of parliamentarism, workers' councils, the vital importance of working-class self-emancipation, and more.
With the recent resurgence in the naïve hope that Democratic Socialism and trade unionism can act as radical methods to meaningfully confront or even overthrow capitalism, Pannekoek's council communist ideas encourage workers to think for themselves rather than submit to the dead-end traditions of the old movement and embrace the collective self-activity that can build a new movement capable of overcoming the struggles we face ahead.


List of contents

Editor’s Introduction
Part I: The Workers’ Way to Freedom (c. 1935)
Chapter I: Capitalism
Chapter II: The Power of the Classes
Chapter III: Trade Unionism
Chapter IV: The Political Fight & Social Democracy
Chapter V: The Russian Revolution
Chapter VI: The Communist Party
Chapter VII: Fascism
Chapter VIII: The Intellectual Class
Chapter IX: The Workers’ Revolution
Chapter X: The Workers’ Councils
Part II: Other Council Communist Writings (1936–1954)
Chapter XI: The Party & the Working Class (1936)
Chapter XII: State Capitalism & Dictatorship (1937)
Chapter XIII: Society & Mind in Marxian Philosophy (1937)
Chapter XIV: General Remarks on the Question of Organization (1938)
Chapter XV: Marx & Utopia · Party & Class (c. 1940s)
Chapter XVI: The Failure of the Working Class (1946)
Chapter XVII: Public Ownership & Common Ownership (1947)
Chapter XVIII: Marx & Bakunin (1949)
Chapter XIX: Some Remarks on Parliamentarism (1949)
Chapter XX: On Workers’ Councils (1952)
Chapter XXI: The Need for the Workers to Lead Themselves (1953–1954)
Appendix A: Anton Pannekoek by Paul Mattick (1962)
Appendix B: Article Versions of Manuscript Chapters (1935–1936)
The Intellectuals (1935)
Trade Unionism (1936)
Workers’ Councils (1936)
The Power of the Classes (1936)
On the Communist Party (1936)
The Role of Fascism (1936)
Index

About the author

Anton Pannekoek (1873–1960) was a Dutch astronomer, Marxist revolutionary, and key theoretician of council communism—a Marxist alternative to both Leninism and Social Democracy that instead emphasized working-class self-emancipation through workers’ councils. He developed his theories through witnessing the rise and fall of Social Democracy as well as the rise and fall of the Russian and German Revolutions. He is most well-known by revolutionaries for his magnum opus Workers’ Councils (AK Press, 2002) and his critical Lenin as Philosopher (Merlin Press, 1975), and by astronomers for his research of the Milky Way and astrophysics—for which he received an honorary degree from Harvard University in 1936; the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1951; and had a crater on the Moon, an asteroid, and the Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy at the University of Amsterdam named after him.
Robyn K. Winters is a libertarian communist, amateur historian, and contributor of Working Class History. They currently work within the Canadian labour movement and reside on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

Summary

Anton Pannekoek (1873-1960), the Dutch astronomer and Marxist revolutionary, was a key theoretician of council communism—a Marxist alternative to both Leninism and Social Democracy that instead emphasized working-class self-emancipation through workers’ councils.

The first half of this book walks the reader through the fundamentals of council communism and the conditions that led to the development of these ideas. The second half of the book demonstrates the rich depth of Pannekoek’s thinking, with penetrating essays and insightful letters on revolutionary organization, state capitalism, Marxism, the limitations of trade unions and political parties, the potential of wildcat strikes, public vs. common ownership, the necessity of combining organization and freedom, the deceptiveness of parliamentarism, workers’ councils, the vital importance of working-class self-emancipation, and more.
With the recent resurgence in the naïve hope that Democratic Socialism and trade unionism can act as radical methods to meaningfully confront or even overthrow capitalism, Pannekoek’s council communist ideas encourage workers to think for themselves rather than submit to the dead-end traditions of the old movement and embrace the collective self-activity that can build a new movement capable of overcoming the struggles we face ahead.

Product details

Authors Anton Pannekoek, PANNEKOEK ANTON
Assisted by Robyn K. Winters (Editor)
Publisher Ingram Publishers Services
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.12.2023
 
EAN 9798887440088
ISBN 979-8-88744-008-8
Series Working Class History
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Political science > Political science and political education

POLITICAL SCIENCE / Labor & Industrial Relations, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Essays, Political activism

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