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IntroductiontotheEnglishEdition
Letus foramomentgobackto thehistoryof the 1960sand1970s leftist social
movement.Thoseyears revealedaprofoundcrisisof ideologicalandpolitical
values–acrisis thatdeeplyaffected theexponentsofWestEuropean radical
Social-Democratic groups, liberalising Eurocommunist factions of the Com-
munistmovement, andEuropeanandAmerican leftist intellectuals. It found
expression in the growing strength of various endeavours: First, critiques of
theprogrammaticlineofSocial-DemocraticParties–suchastheireclecticism,
ideologyof the ‘people’s party’, lackof revolutionary theory, and statemono-
poly capitalism–anddemands for structural reforms towards internal party
democracy.1Second,theEurocommunists’attempttoadjustsocialist ideology
to the needs of themodern industrial state.2 Third, the appearance of intel-
lectualsandgroupsof radicalyouthunderthebannerof the ‘newleft’, casting
doubtover the theoretical,methodological, and ideological valueofMarxism
anditspracticalconsequences,suchastheprinciplesofpartyorganisationand
formingalliances.Thesemovementsdemandedthetransformationofsocieties
throughtheir ideologicalandcultural realms.3
1 See juso-jahrbuch1968–69,Bonn1970,p.41,andHandbuchfürdieJungsozialistenarbeit,Bonn
1971,p. iii/1.
2 Theexpression ‘Eurocommunism’was first usedby theYugoslavian journalist, FranceBar-
bieri, in 1975, and shortly after by the Italian journalist, Arrigo Levi, and by the Catholic
philosopher,AugustoDelNoche. The Italian, Spanish, French, Swedish, British, andGreek
CommunistpartieswereeventuallydominatedbytheEurocommunist trend,aswere–not
entirelylogicallyduetotheirgeographicallocations–theJapaneseandAustralianCommun-
ist parties. The tendency,whose adherentswere ideologically rather thanorganisationally
linked,wascharacterisedby itsopenapproach towardsMarxismandother ideological ori-
entations, its critical attitude towards theSovietmodel of socialismand theLeninist party
concept, itsdemandforautonomyandequalityofCommunistparties,anditspostulates for
ademocraticpathtosocialismandapluralist-democraticmodelofsocialismineconomyand
politics.CompareLeonhard1980.
3 Originally,the‘newleft’representedanintellectualcurrent.Itemergedattheturnofthe1950s
and1960smainlyamongacademics(philosophers, sociologists,andeconomists),publicists,
andwriters drawingonneo-Marxism, existentialism, and social psychoanalysis.Under the
influenceofthestudentprotestsandFrench‘gauchism’of1968,ittransformedintoapolitical
movement.Representativesofthe‘newleft’ included,amongothers,C.WrightMills,Herbert
Marcuse,WilhelmReich, andTheodoreRoszak in theUnitedStates,AndréGorz, Jean-Paul
Sartre,PaulSweezy,CharlesBettelheim,andErnestMandel inFrance,OskarNegtandRudi
DutschkeinWestGermany,andRossanaRossandainItaly.Thestrengthsofthenewleftwere
Otto Bauer (1881–1938)
Thinker and Politician
- Titel
- Otto Bauer (1881–1938)
- Untertitel
- Thinker and Politician
- Autor
- Ewa Czerwińska-Schupp
- Verlag
- Brill
- Ort
- Leiden
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-90-04-32583-8
- Abmessungen
- 7.9 x 12.0 cm
- Seiten
- 444
- Schlagwörter
- Otto Bauer, Österreich, Österreichische, Politiker, Denker, Austomarxismus, Sozialismus, Moral, Imperialismus, Nation, Demokratie, Revolution, Staat, Faschismus, Krieg, SDAP
- Kategorie
- Biographien