Photo de l'auteur

Rosa Luxemburg (1871–1919)

Auteur de L'accumulation du capital - Tomes I et II

178+ oeuvres 2,471 utilisateurs 24 critiques 8 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Rosa Luxemburg (1870-1919). Polish-born revolutionary who was a leader of the left-wing movement in Germany from 1898 until her murder in 1919
Crédit image: From Wikimedia Commons

Séries

Œuvres de Rosa Luxemburg

Reform or Revolution (1973) 332 exemplaires
Letters from Prison (1922) 131 exemplaires
Rosa Luxemburg Speaks (1970) 120 exemplaires
The Letters of Rosa Luxemburg (1979) 111 exemplaires
The Rosa Luxemburg Reader (2004) 82 exemplaires
La Crise de la Social-Democratie (1967) 43 exemplaires
Die russische Revolution (2000) 37 exemplaires
On the Spartacus Programme (1995) 19 exemplaires
Politische Schriften (1967) 13 exemplaires
Ich war, ich bin, ich werde sein! (2008) 12 exemplaires
Oeuvres de Rosa Luxemburg, tome 2 (1969) 12 exemplaires
L'ordre règne à Berlin 11 exemplaires
Un po' di compassione (2007) 11 exemplaires
Social Reform or Revolution (1966) 10 exemplaires
Socialism and the Churches (1972) 9 exemplaires
What is economics (1954) 8 exemplaires
Briefe an Karl und Luise Kautsky (1982) 7 exemplaires
Briefe an Freunde (1976) 7 exemplaires
Testamento político (1975) 6 exemplaires
Theory and Practice (1980) 5 exemplaires
Politische Schriften III (1968) 4 exemplaires
Obras Escogidas Rosa Luxemburgo (1978) 4 exemplaires
Scritti scelti (1963) 4 exemplaires
Skrifter i utvalg 2 (1973) 3 exemplaires
Herbarium (2016) 3 exemplaires
Zeitmontage: Rosa Luxemburg (1988) 3 exemplaires
Turkiye Uzerine Yazilar (2013) 3 exemplaires
O rewolucji 1905, 1917 (2018) 2 exemplaires
Sermaye Birikimi (2015) 2 exemplaires
Gesammelte Werke Bd. 1.1 (2007) 2 exemplaires
Lettere 1893 - 1919 2 exemplaires
Gesammelte Werke (1988) 2 exemplaires
Lettres de la Prison 1 exemplaire
Rosa Luxemburg 1 exemplaire
Terrore 1 exemplaire
August 1914 bis Januar 1919 (1990) 1 exemplaire
Obras escogidas (II) (1995) 1 exemplaire
Obras escogidas (I) 1 exemplaire
Praia 1 exemplaire
A Causa da Derrota 1 exemplaire
Gesammelte Briefe Bd. 4 [...] (1982) 1 exemplaire
Kartenhaeuser 1 exemplaire
Gesammelte Briefe. Band 1. (1989) 1 exemplaire
Pagine scelte 1 exemplaire
Marxisme contre dictature (2015) 1 exemplaire
Correspondance: 1914-1919 (1977) 1 exemplaire
Izbrani spisi 1 exemplaire
Lettres et textes choisis (2014) 1 exemplaire
Skrifter i utvalg 1 (1973) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Luxemburg, Rosalia
Date de naissance
1871-03-05
Date de décès
1919-01-15
Lieu de sépulture
Friedrichsfelde Cemetery, Berlin, Germany
Sexe
female
Nationalité
Germany (passport)
Poland (birth)
Lieu de naissance
Zamość, Poland
Lieu du décès
Berlin, Deutsches Reich
Lieux de résidence
Zamość, Poland (birth)
Warsaw, Poland
Zürich, Switzerland
Berlin, Germany
Études
University of Zurich
Professions
revolutionary
Marxist theorist
philosopher
economist
Relations
Liebknecht, Karl
Kautsky, Karl
Kautsky, Luise
Leonhard, Susanne (friend)
Organisations
SDKP (Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland)
SPD (Social Democratic Party of Germany)
Spartacist League
KPD (Communist Party of Germany)
Courte biographie
Rosa Luxemburg was the youngest of five children born to a lower middle-class Jewish family living in the Polish region of Russia. She became interested in politics as a young girl. At 16, she graduated at the top of her class at gymnasium in Warsaw, but was denied the gold medal because of "an oppositional attitude toward the authorities." In 1889, Rosa went to Zurich University to study law and political economy. In Switzerland she met numerous political exiles, including Leo Jogiches, with whom she began a long romantic relationship; though a few years later, she married Gustav Lübeck to obtain German citizenship. She settled in Berlin, where she joined the Social Democratic Party (SPD). She was active in revolutionary politics in Poland, Lithuania, France, and Germany and was imprisoned on several occasions for this and for opposing World War I. A leading Marxist theorist, she published numerous pamphlets and books including The Accumulation of Capital (1913). She and Karl Liebknecht co-founded the Spartakusbund -- Spartacus League or Spartacists -- which eventually became the German Communist Party. During the German Revolution of 1918-1919, Rosa founded Die Rote Fahne (The Red Flag), the newspaper of the Spartacist movement. When the revolt was crushed by the government and the Freikorps (right-wing paramilitary groups), Rosa Luxemburg, Liebknecht, and some of their supporters were captured and murdered while in police custody.

Membres

Critiques

Pretty good polemic, but falls in the awkward position of not being a real introduction because it uses Marxist terms on the regular and is only really understandable from that perspective while also not really saying anything new to someone who's familiar with Marxism. There are quite a lot of good quotes that give good explanations for why x view is wrong - not comprehensively, but enough to give you a good idea *if* you're familiar with Marxism. Sometimes the writing is a bit bad and I had a lot of trouble understanding exactly what she was saying. There's also quite a bit which is just polemic and doesn't really explain anything apart from saying "dude's bad". Which is to be expected really. Her idea of trade unions maintaining market wages is kind of weird.

Ultimately it's a pretty good but non-essential essay that gives you good ideas against reformism. It's interesting and sad how dominant it's become and how many Marxists fall into the same traps.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
tombomp | 2 autres critiques | Oct 31, 2023 |
I was really looking forward to reading this book: I am a great admirer of Rosa Luxemburg and the shorter works which I have had the pleasure of reading have all been very down to earth, sensible and just what socialism needs.

This book was a BIG disappointment. It is very certain of its own rectitude and the fallacy of every other theory, it sees to me, to nit pick on miniscule details, over repeat and is incredibly dry. I'm afraid that I didn't finish it... a couple of hundred pages in, I simply felt that I was wading in treacle and, tat it hadn't sufficient pay back to continue the slog.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
the.ken.petersen | 2 autres critiques | Aug 28, 2023 |
This is effectively two long articles combined in one small book, and re-reading it after many years, I can now understand it in a different light than before.

Rosa Luxemburg has been claimed by many competing left groups ranging from moderate Social Democrats to Trotskyists and Stalinists. The essays here provide arguments for all sides. For example, the uncompleted book that constitutes ‘The Russian Revolution’ is full of praise for Lenin and the Bolsheviks. And its criticisms largely come from the left, not the right. Luxemburg opposed early Bolshevik decisions to give land to the peasants (she proposes a kind of collectivization instead). And she absolutely detests the Bolshevik decision to support the right of nations to self-determination. (On this later point she had a history: she was an opponent of Polish independence even as leader of one of Poland’s Social Democratic parties.)

But she also comes down hard on the Bolsheviks for their decision to disperse the elected Constituent Assembly in early 1918, and for their refusal to guarantee freedom of the press and the right to assembly. It’s a mixed bag, and it’s incomplete. There are many “notes to self” throughout.

The second article was written a decade and a half earlier and it is Luxemburg’s answer to Lenin’s proposals regarding the structure of the Russian Social Democratic Party. Lenin was advocating a kind of ‘ultra-centralisation’ which Luxemburg opposed. She was far more convinced that the masses on their own could create the revolution without the help of an all-powerful, all-knowing Central Committee. The last line of the book has become very well known: ‘Historically, the errors committed by a truly revolutionary movement are infinitely more fruitful than the infallibility of the cleverest Central Committee.’

A book as complicated as its author, with arguments to justify many interpretations — but recommended reading nonetheless.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
ericlee | 1 autre critique | Jul 3, 2023 |
The more one reads of Rosa Luxemburg's astute political dissections, the more one realises the disservice done to humanity by her untimely demise.

Rosa respects Marx, Lenin and Trotsky, but refuses to join the fan club. She is quite willing to review their actions and is keen to emphasise that Marxism is a set of possibilities, not an instruction book to be followed word for word. If only certain other people had this wisdom.

Rosa is ALWAYS worth reading.
 
Signalé
the.ken.petersen | 1 autre critique | Apr 14, 2023 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
178
Aussi par
5
Membres
2,471
Popularité
#10,376
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
24
ISBN
307
Langues
18
Favoris
8

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