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Karl Kautsky

Karl Johann Kautsky (/ˈktski/; German: [ˈkaʊtski]; 16 October 1854 – 17 October 1938) was a Czech-Austrian philosopher, journalist, and Marxist theorist. A leading theorist of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) and the Second International, Kautsky advocated orthodox Marxism, which emphasized the scientific, materialist, and determinist character of Karl Marx's work. This interpretation dominated European Marxism for two decades, from the death of Friedrich Engels in 1895 to the outbreak of World War I in 1914.

Karl Kautsky
Born
Karl Johann Kautsky

16 October 1854
Died17 October 1938(1938-10-17) (aged 84)
Alma materUniversity of Vienna
Spouse
(m. 1890)
Era
Region
SchoolOrthodox Marxism
Main interests
Political philosophy, politics, economics, history
Notable ideas
Evolutionary epistemology, social instinct, active adaption, hyperimperialism

Born in Prague, Kautsky studied at the University of Vienna. In 1875, he joined the Social Democratic Party of Austria, and from 1883 founded and edited the influential socialist journal Die Neue Zeit. From 1885 to 1890, he lived in London, where he worked with Engels. In Germany, he became active in the SPD and wrote the theory section of the party's Erfurt Program (1891), which became a major influence on other European socialist parties. He briefly left in 1917 to join the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD) because of his opposition to the increasing collaboration of the SPD with the war effort, but rejoined in 1922. By the 1930s, his influence and involvement in politics was dwindling, and he died in Amsterdam in 1938.

Kautsky's interpretation of Marxism held that history could not be "hurried", and that politically workers and workers' parties must wait for the material economic conditions for a socialist revolution to be met. Under his influence, the SPD adopted a gradualist approach, taking advantage of bourgeois parliamentary democracy to improve the lives of workers until capitalism was brought down by its internal contradictions. His positions lead to disputes with other leading Marxists, including Eduard Bernstein, who favored a reformist approach; Rosa Luxemburg, who advocated revolutionary spontaneity; and Vladimir Lenin, who Kautsky believed had initiated a premature socialist revolution in Russia in 1917 and led the Soviet Union toward a dictatorship.

Life and career edit

Early years edit

Karl Kautsky was born in Prague of an artistic and middle class family – his parents were Johann Kautsky (a Czech scenic designer) and Minna, née Jaich (an Austrian actress and writer of Czech descent). The family moved to Vienna when Kautsky was the age of seven. He studied history, philosophy and economics at the University of Vienna from 1874, and became a member of the Social Democratic Party of Austria (SPÖ) in 1875. Shortly afterwards he published his first contributions in the German socialist journals Der Volksstaat and Vorwärts and to the Austrian journals Gleichheit and Der Sozialist.[1]

In 1880 he joined a group of German socialists in Zürich who were supported financially by Karl Höchberg, and who smuggled socialist material into Germany at the time of the Anti-Socialist Laws (1878–1890).

Political career edit

In 1883, Kautsky founded the monthly Die Neue Zeit ("The New Times") in Stuttgart, which became a weekly in 1890. He edited the magazine until September 1917: this gave him a steady income and allowed him to propagate Marxism.[2] From 1885 to 1890 he spent time in London, where he became a close friend of Friedrich Engels. His position as a prominent Marxist theorist was assured in 1888, when Engels put him to the task of editing Marx's three-volume work Theories of Surplus Value.[3] In 1891 he co-authored the Erfurt Program of the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD) together with August Bebel and Eduard Bernstein.

Following the death of Engels in 1895, Kautsky became one of the most important and influential theoreticians of Marxism, representing the mainstream of the party together with August Bebel, and outlining a Marxist theory of imperialism. When Bernstein attacked the traditional Marxist position of the necessity for revolution in the late 1890s, Kautsky denounced him, arguing that Bernstein's emphasis on the ethical foundations of Socialism opened the road to a call for an alliance with the "progressive" bourgeoisie and a non-class approach.

Wartime years edit

In 1914, when the German Social-Democrat deputies in the Reichstag voted for war credits, Kautsky (who was not a deputy but attended their meetings) suggested abstaining. Kautsky claimed that Germany was waging a defensive war against the threat of Czarist Russia. However, in June 1915, about ten months after the war had begun and when it had become obvious that this was going to be a sustained, appallingly brutal and costly struggle, he issued an appeal with Eduard Bernstein and Hugo Haase against the pro-war leaders of the SPD and denounced the German government's annexationist aims. In 1917 he left the SPD for the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD) with united socialists who opposed the war.

After the November Revolution in Germany, Kautsky served as under-secretary of State in the Foreign Office in the short-lived SPD-USPD revolutionary government and worked at finding documents which disproved the alleged war guilt of Imperial Germany.

Post-war years edit

 
Kautsky with the Georgian Social-Democrats, Tbilisi, 1920.
In the first row: S. Devdariani, Noe Ramishvili, Noe Zhordania, Kautsky and his wife Luise, Silibistro Jibladze, Razhden Arsenidze;
in the second row: Kautsky's secretary Paul Olberg, Victor Tevzaia, K. Gvarjaladze, Konstantine Sabakhtarashvili, S. Tevzadze, Avtandil Urushadze, R. Tsintsabadze
 
Kautsky's opening broadside against the revolutionary violence of the Russian Revolution, Die Diktatur des Proletariats (The Dictatorship of the Proletariat), first published in Vienna in 1918.

In 1920, when the USPD split, he went with a minority of that party back into the SPD. He visited Georgia in 1920 and wrote a book on the Democratic Republic of Georgia that at that moment was still independent of Bolshevist Russia. By the time it was published in 1921, Georgia had been thoroughly influenced by the Russian Civil War, the Red Army had invaded Georgia, and the Bolsheviks had imposed the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic. By that point, Kautsky considered the Soviet Union to have become an imperialist state, due to the destructiveness of the invasion of Georgia, and the minimal political role that the actual proletariat had in Soviet Russia.[4]

Kautsky assisted in the creation of the party program adopted in Heidelberg (1925) by the German Social Democratic Party. In 1924, at the age of 70, he moved back to Vienna with his family, and remained there until 1938. At the time of Hitler's Anschluss, he fled to Czechoslovakia and thence by plane to Amsterdam, where he died in the same year.

Karl Kautsky lived in Berlin-Friedenau for many years; his wife, Luise Kautsky, became a close friend of Rosa Luxemburg, who also lived in Friedenau. A commemorative plaque marks where Kautsky lived at Saarstraße 14.

Vladimir Lenin described Kautsky as a "renegade" in his pamphlet The Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky; Kautsky in turn castigated Lenin in his 1934 work Marxism and Bolshevism: Democracy and Dictatorship:

The Bolsheviki under Lenin's leadership, however, succeeded in capturing control of the armed forces in Petrograd and later in Moscow and thus laid the foundation for a new dictatorship in place of the old Czarist dictatorship.[5]

A collection of excerpts of Kautsky's writings, Social Democracy vs. Communism, discussed Bolshevist rule in Russia. He saw the Bolsheviks (or Communists) as a conspiratorial organization that had gained power by a coup and initiated revolutionary changes for which there was no economic rationale in Russia. Instead, a bureaucracy-dominated society developed, the miseries of which outweighed the problems of Western capitalism, he argued. He stated:

Foreign tourists in Russia stand in silent amazement before the gigantic enterprises created there, as they stand before the pyramids, for example. Only seldom does the thought occur to them what enslavement, what lowering of human self-esteem was connected with the construction of those gigantic establishments.[6] …They extracted the means for the creation of material productive forces by destroying the most essential productive force of all – the laboring man. In the terrible conditions created by the Piatiletka, people rapidly perished. Soviet films, of course, did not show this.[6]

Death and legacy edit

Kautsky died on 17 October 1938, in Amsterdam. His son, Benedikt Kautsky [de], spent seven years in concentration camps; his wife, Luise Kautsky, was murdered in Auschwitz.[7]

Kautsky is notable for, in addition to his anti-Bolshevik polemics, his editing and publication of Marx's Capital, Volume IV (usually published as Theories of Surplus Value).

Works in English edit

  • The Economic Doctrines of Karl Marx. (1887/1903)
  • Thomas More and his Utopia. (1888)
  • The Class Struggle (Erfurt Program). Daniel DeLeon, trans. New York: New York Labor News Co., 1899.
  • Communism in Central Europe at the Time of the Reformation. J.L. & E.G. Mulliken, trans. London: T.F. Unwin, 1897.
  • Forerunners of Modern Socialism, 1895.
  • Frederick Engels: His Life, His Work and His Writings. May Wood Simons, trans. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1899.
  • On the Agrarian Question (1899), Pete Burgess, trans. London: Zwan Publications, 1988.
  • The Social Revolution and On the Day After the Social Revolution. J. B. Askew, trans. London: Twentieth Century Press, 1903.
  • Socialism and Colonial Policy (1907)
  • The Historic Accomplishment of Karl Marx (1908)
  • Ethics and the Materialist Conception of History. J. B. Askew, trans. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1909.
  • The Road to Power A.M. Simons, trans. Chicago: Samuel A. Bloch, 1909.
  • The Class Struggle (Erfurt Program). William E. Bohn, trans. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1909.
  • Finance-Capital and Crises (1911)
  • The High Cost of Living: Changes in Gold Production and the Rise in Prices. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr & Co., 1914.
  • The Guilt of William Hohenzollern. London: Skeffington and Son, n.d. (1919).
  • The Dictatorship of the Proletariat. H. J. Stenning, trans. London: National Labour Press, n.d. (c. 1919).
  • Terrorism and Communism: A Contribution to the Natural History of Revolution. W.H. Kerridge, trans. London: National Labour Press, 1920.
  • "Preface" to The Twelve Who Are to Die: The Trial of the Socialists-Revolutionists in Moscow. Berlin: Delegation of the Party of Socialists-Revolutionists, 1922.
  • Foundations of Christianity: A Study of Christian Origins. New York: International Publishers, 1925.
  • The Labour Revolution. H. J. Stenning, trans. London: National Labour Press, 1925.
  • Are the Jews a Race? New York: International Publishers, 1926.
  • Communism vs. Socialism. Joseph Shaplen, trans. New York: American League for Democratic Socialism, 1932.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Steenson 1991, pp. 30–31; Blumenberg 1960, pp. 19–20
  2. ^ Gary P Steenson. . Archived from the original on 18 May 2008. Retrieved 2007-07-27.
  3. ^ Blackledge, Paul (July 2006). "Karl Kautsky and Marxist Historiography". Science & Society. 70 (3): 338. doi:10.1521/siso.70.3.337. JSTOR 40404839.
  4. ^ Kautsky, Karl (1921). "XIII The Moscow Bonapartism". Georgia. Retrieved 2021-06-10 – via Marxists Internet Archive.
  5. ^ Kautsky, Karl (1934). "Marxism and Bolshevism". Marxists.
  6. ^ a b Kautsky, Karl. "Is Soviet Russia A Socialist State?". Social Democracy vs. Communism.
  7. ^ Callinicos, A. Social Theory: a historical introduction.

Sources edit

  • Blumenberg (1960). Karl Kautskys literatisches Werk: eine bibliographische Übersicht (in German). 's-Gravenhage: Mouton & Co. doi:10.1515/9783112314180. ISBN 9783112314180.
  • Steenson, Gary P. (1991). Karl Kautsky 1854–1938, Marxism in the Classical Years. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 0-8229-5443-5.

Further reading edit

  • Banaji, Jairus (January 1990). "Illusions about the peasantry: Karl Kautsky and the agrarian question" (PDF). Journal of Peasant Studies. 17 (2): 288–307. doi:10.1080/03066159008438422.
  • Donald, Moira. (1993). Marxism and Revolution: Karl Kautsky and the Russian Marxists, 1900–1924. New Haven: Yale University Press.
  • Gaido, Daniel. "Karl Kautsky on capitalism in the ancient World." Journal of Peasant Studies 30.2 (2003): 146–158.
  • Gaido, Daniel. "'The American Worker' and the Theory of Permanent Revolution: Karl Kautsky on Werner Sombart's Why Is There No Socialism in the United States?." Historical Materialism 11.4 (2003): 79–123. online
  • Geary, Dick. Karl Kautsky (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1987).
  • Gronow, Jukka. On the Formation of Marxism: Karl Kautsky's Theory of Capitalism, the Marxism of the Second International and Karl Marx's Critique of Political Economy. [2015] Chicago: Haymarket Books, 2016.
  • Kołakowski, Leszek, Main Currents of Marxism. P.S. Falla, trans. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2005.
  • Nygaard, Bertel. "Constructing Marxism: Karl Kautsky and the French revolution." History of European Ideas 35.4 (2009): 450–464.
  • Salvadori, Massimo L. Karl Kautsky and the Socialist Revolution, 1880-1938. Jon Rothschild, trans. London: New Left Books, 1979.
  • Steenson, Gary P. Karl Kautsky, 1854–1938: Marxism in the Classical Years. Pittsburgh, PA: University of Pittsburgh Press, 1978.

Primary sources edit

  • Kautsky, Karl. Karl Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism., edited and translated by Ben Lewis. Leiden: Brill, 2019.

External links edit

karl, kautsky, karl, johann, kautsky, german, ˈkaʊtski, october, 1854, october, 1938, czech, austrian, philosopher, journalist, marxist, theorist, leading, theorist, social, democratic, party, germany, second, international, kautsky, advocated, orthodox, marxi. Karl Johann Kautsky ˈ k aʊ t s k i German ˈkaʊtski 16 October 1854 17 October 1938 was a Czech Austrian philosopher journalist and Marxist theorist A leading theorist of the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD and the Second International Kautsky advocated orthodox Marxism which emphasized the scientific materialist and determinist character of Karl Marx s work This interpretation dominated European Marxism for two decades from the death of Friedrich Engels in 1895 to the outbreak of World War I in 1914 Karl KautskyBornKarl Johann Kautsky16 October 1854Prague Austrian EmpireDied17 October 1938 1938 10 17 aged 84 Amsterdam NetherlandsAlma materUniversity of ViennaSpouseLuise Kautsky m 1890 wbr EraModern philosophy 19th century philosophy 20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophy Czech philosophySchoolOrthodox MarxismMain interestsPolitical philosophy politics economics historyNotable ideasEvolutionary epistemology social instinct active adaption hyperimperialismBorn in Prague Kautsky studied at the University of Vienna In 1875 he joined the Social Democratic Party of Austria and from 1883 founded and edited the influential socialist journal Die Neue Zeit From 1885 to 1890 he lived in London where he worked with Engels In Germany he became active in the SPD and wrote the theory section of the party s Erfurt Program 1891 which became a major influence on other European socialist parties He briefly left in 1917 to join the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany USPD because of his opposition to the increasing collaboration of the SPD with the war effort but rejoined in 1922 By the 1930s his influence and involvement in politics was dwindling and he died in Amsterdam in 1938 Kautsky s interpretation of Marxism held that history could not be hurried and that politically workers and workers parties must wait for the material economic conditions for a socialist revolution to be met Under his influence the SPD adopted a gradualist approach taking advantage of bourgeois parliamentary democracy to improve the lives of workers until capitalism was brought down by its internal contradictions His positions lead to disputes with other leading Marxists including Eduard Bernstein who favored a reformist approach Rosa Luxemburg who advocated revolutionary spontaneity and Vladimir Lenin who Kautsky believed had initiated a premature socialist revolution in Russia in 1917 and led the Soviet Union toward a dictatorship Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early years 1 2 Political career 1 3 Wartime years 1 4 Post war years 1 5 Death and legacy 2 Works in English 3 See also 4 Footnotes 5 Sources 6 Further reading 6 1 Primary sources 7 External linksLife and career editEarly years edit Karl Kautsky was born in Prague of an artistic and middle class family his parents were Johann Kautsky a Czech scenic designer and Minna nee Jaich an Austrian actress and writer of Czech descent The family moved to Vienna when Kautsky was the age of seven He studied history philosophy and economics at the University of Vienna from 1874 and became a member of the Social Democratic Party of Austria SPO in 1875 Shortly afterwards he published his first contributions in the German socialist journals Der Volksstaat and Vorwarts and to the Austrian journals Gleichheit and Der Sozialist 1 In 1880 he joined a group of German socialists in Zurich who were supported financially by Karl Hochberg and who smuggled socialist material into Germany at the time of the Anti Socialist Laws 1878 1890 Political career edit In 1883 Kautsky founded the monthly Die Neue Zeit The New Times in Stuttgart which became a weekly in 1890 He edited the magazine until September 1917 this gave him a steady income and allowed him to propagate Marxism 2 From 1885 to 1890 he spent time in London where he became a close friend of Friedrich Engels His position as a prominent Marxist theorist was assured in 1888 when Engels put him to the task of editing Marx s three volume work Theories of Surplus Value 3 In 1891 he co authored the Erfurt Program of the Social Democratic Party of Germany SPD together with August Bebel and Eduard Bernstein Following the death of Engels in 1895 Kautsky became one of the most important and influential theoreticians of Marxism representing the mainstream of the party together with August Bebel and outlining a Marxist theory of imperialism When Bernstein attacked the traditional Marxist position of the necessity for revolution in the late 1890s Kautsky denounced him arguing that Bernstein s emphasis on the ethical foundations of Socialism opened the road to a call for an alliance with the progressive bourgeoisie and a non class approach Wartime years edit In 1914 when the German Social Democrat deputies in the Reichstag voted for war credits Kautsky who was not a deputy but attended their meetings suggested abstaining Kautsky claimed that Germany was waging a defensive war against the threat of Czarist Russia However in June 1915 about ten months after the war had begun and when it had become obvious that this was going to be a sustained appallingly brutal and costly struggle he issued an appeal with Eduard Bernstein and Hugo Haase against the pro war leaders of the SPD and denounced the German government s annexationist aims In 1917 he left the SPD for the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany USPD with united socialists who opposed the war After the November Revolution in Germany Kautsky served as under secretary of State in the Foreign Office in the short lived SPD USPD revolutionary government and worked at finding documents which disproved the alleged war guilt of Imperial Germany Post war years edit nbsp Kautsky with the Georgian Social Democrats Tbilisi 1920 In the first row S Devdariani Noe Ramishvili Noe Zhordania Kautsky and his wife Luise Silibistro Jibladze Razhden Arsenidze in the second row Kautsky s secretary Paul Olberg Victor Tevzaia K Gvarjaladze Konstantine Sabakhtarashvili S Tevzadze Avtandil Urushadze R Tsintsabadze nbsp Kautsky s opening broadside against the revolutionary violence of the Russian Revolution Die Diktatur des Proletariats The Dictatorship of the Proletariat first published in Vienna in 1918 In 1920 when the USPD split he went with a minority of that party back into the SPD He visited Georgia in 1920 and wrote a book on the Democratic Republic of Georgia that at that moment was still independent of Bolshevist Russia By the time it was published in 1921 Georgia had been thoroughly influenced by the Russian Civil War the Red Army had invaded Georgia and the Bolsheviks had imposed the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic By that point Kautsky considered the Soviet Union to have become an imperialist state due to the destructiveness of the invasion of Georgia and the minimal political role that the actual proletariat had in Soviet Russia 4 Kautsky assisted in the creation of the party program adopted in Heidelberg 1925 by the German Social Democratic Party In 1924 at the age of 70 he moved back to Vienna with his family and remained there until 1938 At the time of Hitler s Anschluss he fled to Czechoslovakia and thence by plane to Amsterdam where he died in the same year Karl Kautsky lived in Berlin Friedenau for many years his wife Luise Kautsky became a close friend of Rosa Luxemburg who also lived in Friedenau A commemorative plaque marks where Kautsky lived at Saarstrasse 14 Vladimir Lenin described Kautsky as a renegade in his pamphlet The Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky Kautsky in turn castigated Lenin in his 1934 work Marxism and Bolshevism Democracy and Dictatorship The Bolsheviki under Lenin s leadership however succeeded in capturing control of the armed forces in Petrograd and later in Moscow and thus laid the foundation for a new dictatorship in place of the old Czarist dictatorship 5 A collection of excerpts of Kautsky s writings Social Democracy vs Communism discussed Bolshevist rule in Russia He saw the Bolsheviks or Communists as a conspiratorial organization that had gained power by a coup and initiated revolutionary changes for which there was no economic rationale in Russia Instead a bureaucracy dominated society developed the miseries of which outweighed the problems of Western capitalism he argued He stated Foreign tourists in Russia stand in silent amazement before the gigantic enterprises created there as they stand before the pyramids for example Only seldom does the thought occur to them what enslavement what lowering of human self esteem was connected with the construction of those gigantic establishments 6 They extracted the means for the creation of material productive forces by destroying the most essential productive force of all the laboring man In the terrible conditions created by the Piatiletka people rapidly perished Soviet films of course did not show this 6 Death and legacy edit Kautsky died on 17 October 1938 in Amsterdam His son Benedikt Kautsky de spent seven years in concentration camps his wife Luise Kautsky was murdered in Auschwitz 7 Kautsky is notable for in addition to his anti Bolshevik polemics his editing and publication of Marx s Capital Volume IV usually published as Theories of Surplus Value Works in English editThe Economic Doctrines of Karl Marx 1887 1903 Thomas More and his Utopia 1888 The Class Struggle Erfurt Program Daniel DeLeon trans New York New York Labor News Co 1899 Communism in Central Europe at the Time of the Reformation J L amp E G Mulliken trans London T F Unwin 1897 Forerunners of Modern Socialism 1895 Frederick Engels His Life His Work and His Writings May Wood Simons trans Chicago Charles H Kerr amp Co 1899 On the Agrarian Question 1899 Pete Burgess trans London Zwan Publications 1988 The Social Revolution and On the Day After the Social Revolution J B Askew trans London Twentieth Century Press 1903 Socialism and Colonial Policy 1907 The Historic Accomplishment of Karl Marx 1908 Ethics and the Materialist Conception of History J B Askew trans Chicago Charles H Kerr amp Co 1909 The Road to Power A M Simons trans Chicago Samuel A Bloch 1909 The Class Struggle Erfurt Program William E Bohn trans Chicago Charles H Kerr amp Co 1909 Finance Capital and Crises 1911 The High Cost of Living Changes in Gold Production and the Rise in Prices Chicago Charles H Kerr amp Co 1914 The Guilt of William Hohenzollern London Skeffington and Son n d 1919 The Dictatorship of the Proletariat H J Stenning trans London National Labour Press n d c 1919 Terrorism and Communism A Contribution to the Natural History of Revolution W H Kerridge trans London National Labour Press 1920 Preface to The Twelve Who Are to Die The Trial of the Socialists Revolutionists in Moscow Berlin Delegation of the Party of Socialists Revolutionists 1922 Foundations of Christianity A Study of Christian Origins New York International Publishers 1925 The Labour Revolution H J Stenning trans London National Labour Press 1925 Are the Jews a Race New York International Publishers 1926 Communism vs Socialism Joseph Shaplen trans New York American League for Democratic Socialism 1932 See also editThe Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky a response to Kautsky written by Vladimir Lenin 1918 Text Terrorism and Communism a pamphlet written by Leon Trotsky in response to a Kautsky pamphlet by the same name 1920 Text Footnotes edit Steenson 1991 pp 30 31 Blumenberg 1960 pp 19 20 Gary P Steenson Not One Man Not One Penny German Social Democracy 1863 1914 Archived from the original on 18 May 2008 Retrieved 2007 07 27 Blackledge Paul July 2006 Karl Kautsky and Marxist Historiography Science amp Society 70 3 338 doi 10 1521 siso 70 3 337 JSTOR 40404839 Kautsky Karl 1921 XIII The Moscow Bonapartism Georgia Retrieved 2021 06 10 via Marxists Internet Archive Kautsky Karl 1934 Marxism and Bolshevism Marxists a b Kautsky Karl Is Soviet Russia A Socialist State Social Democracy vs Communism Callinicos A Social Theory a historical introduction Sources editBlumenberg 1960 Karl Kautskys literatisches Werk eine bibliographische Ubersicht in German s Gravenhage Mouton amp Co doi 10 1515 9783112314180 ISBN 9783112314180 Steenson Gary P 1991 Karl Kautsky 1854 1938 Marxism in the Classical Years Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 0 8229 5443 5 Further reading editBanaji Jairus January 1990 Illusions about the peasantry Karl Kautsky and the agrarian question PDF Journal of Peasant Studies 17 2 288 307 doi 10 1080 03066159008438422 Donald Moira 1993 Marxism and Revolution Karl Kautsky and the Russian Marxists 1900 1924 New Haven Yale University Press Gaido Daniel Karl Kautsky on capitalism in the ancient World Journal of Peasant Studies 30 2 2003 146 158 Gaido Daniel The American Worker and the Theory of Permanent Revolution Karl Kautsky on Werner Sombart s Why Is There No Socialism in the United States Historical Materialism 11 4 2003 79 123 online Geary Dick Karl Kautsky Manchester Manchester University Press 1987 Gronow Jukka On the Formation of Marxism Karl Kautsky s Theory of Capitalism the Marxism of the Second International and Karl Marx s Critique of Political Economy 2015 Chicago Haymarket Books 2016 Kolakowski Leszek Main Currents of Marxism P S Falla trans New York W W Norton amp Co 2005 Nygaard Bertel Constructing Marxism Karl Kautsky and the French revolution History of European Ideas 35 4 2009 450 464 Salvadori Massimo L Karl Kautsky and the Socialist Revolution 1880 1938 Jon Rothschild trans London New Left Books 1979 Steenson Gary P Karl Kautsky 1854 1938 Marxism in the Classical Years Pittsburgh PA University of Pittsburgh Press 1978 Primary sources edit Kautsky Karl Karl Kautsky on Democracy and Republicanism edited and translated by Ben Lewis Leiden Brill 2019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Karl Kautsky nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Karl Kautsky Karl Kautsky at the Marxists Internet Archive Kautsky post card Archive of Karl Kautsky Papers at the International Institute of Social History Newspaper clippings about Karl Kautsky in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Karl Kautsky at Curlie Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Karl Kautsky amp oldid 1178256836, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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