Requiem for Social Democracy?
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14452/MR-048-08-1997-01_1Keywords:
MarxismAbstract
The fall of the Soviet empire was greeted not only as the funeral of socialism. It was also described as marking the final dead end for all revolutionary roads. The practitioners of revolution—Robespierre and Cromwell—as well as its theoreticians—Luxemburg and Marx—were lumped together in retrospective condemnation. Logically, such an offensive against the very idea of radical transformation should have been coupled with praise for gradualism, for Fabian tactics, for progressive change. To use two cliches at once, the "collapse of communism" could have been combined with the "triumph of social democracy." Actually, nothing of the kind happened. On the contrary, the disintegration of the neo-stalinist system has been followed by a major crisis of social-democracy, taken here in its very narrow current definition—the reformist management of capitalist society.This article can also be found at the Monthly Review website, where most recent articles are published in full.
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Published
1997-01-01
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