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ANTI-BOLSHEVIK COMMUNISM
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Communism aims at putting working people in charge of their lives. A multiplicity of councils rather than a big state bureaucracy is needed to empower working people and to focus control over society.
Mattick develops a theory of a council communism through his survey of the history of the left in Germany and Russia. he challenges Bolshevik politics: especially their perspectives on questions of party and class, and the role of trade unions.
Mattick argues that "The revolutions which succeeded, first of all, in Russia and China, were not proletarian revolutions in the Marxist sense, leading to the 'association of free and equal producers', but state-capitalist revolutions, which were objectively unable to issue into socialism. Marxism served here as a mere ideology to justify the rise of modified capitalist systems, which were no longer determined by market competition but controlled by way of the authoritarian state. Based on the peasantry, but designed with accelerated industrialisation to create an industrial proletariat, they were ready to abolish the traditional bourgeoisie but not capital as a social relationship. This type of capitalism had not been foreseen by Marx and the early Marxists, even though they advocated the capture of state-power to overthrow the bourgeoise -- but only in order to abolish the state itself."
Introduction -- Paul Mattick
I Karl Kautsky: From Marx to Hitler -- 1939
II Luxemberg versus Lenin -- 1935
III The Lenin Legend -- 1935
IV Bolshevism and Stalinism -- 1947
V Council Communism -- 1939
VI Otto Ruhle and the German Labour Movement
VII Spontaniety and Organisation -- 1949
VIII Karl Korsch: His Contribution to Revolutionary Marxism -- 1962
IX Humanism and Socialism -- 1965
X Marxism and the New Physics -- 1960
XI Monopoly Capital -- 1966
XII Workers' Control -- 1967






