Non-market socialism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
著者
書誌事項
Non-market socialism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
Macmillan, 1987
- : pbk
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注記
Later printing published by Palgrave Macmillan
Includes bibliography and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Everyone knows that in socialism private companies are replaced by state enterprises which employ wage-workers in order to produce profits which accrue to the state. 'Not so!' say the authors of this book. In the nineteenth century, socialists as different as Marx and Kropotkin were agreed that socialism means a marketless, moneyless, wageless, classless, stateless world society. Subsequently this vision of non-market socialism has been developed by currents such as the Anarcho-Communists, Impossibilists, Council Communists, Bordigists and Situationists. By tracing this development, this book challenges the assumptions of both supporters and opponents of what is conventionally regarded as socialism.
目次
- Preface - Introduction - Non-Market Socialism in the Nineteenth Century
- M.Rubel - The Thin Red Line: Non-Market Socialism in the Twentieth Century
- J.Crump - Anarcho-Communism
- A.Pengam - Impossibilism
- S.Coleman - Council Communism
- M.Shipway - Bordigism
- A.Buick - Situationism
- M.Shipway - Postscript - Select Bibliography - Index
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