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208 chapter 5
instead adhered to the same connotation that the president of the Belgian
Labour Party, EmileVandervelde, had ascribed to the termat the endof the
nineteenth century: it denoted a process by which workers’ organisations,
suchas co-operatives and tradeunions,wouldgradually supersedecapitalist
institutions.Marx’s concept requireda radical change in thebalanceof class
forcesinthecapitaliststateanditsreplacementbyasocialiststate.TheSocial-
Democraticproject, incontrast, impliedeconomicandpoliticalmodifications
of social life thatwould leavecapitalist class relations intact. In themindsof
SocialDemocrats, lawsand regulations for socialisation representedanearly
stageof full socialisationandwereprefigurativeof revolutionary solutions. It
iseasytoseethatthistypeof ‘socialisation’wascloselyrelatedtothenotionof
‘growingintosocialism’andhadmuchincommonwiththepracticeofreform-
ism.
Theappeal, ‘socialisationisthesloganoftheday’,becameincreasinglypop-
ular inAustriaafter thepublicationofapamphletbyArbeiter-Zeitungeditor,
AlexanderTäubler.92On14March 1919,parliamentpasseda lawoncommen-
cing thepreparations for socialisation: industrial enterprises sufficiently ripe
for socialisationwere tobe socialisedby the state, federal ormunicipal gov-
ernment.Asanaside,socialisationaccordingtothis lawwastheresponsibility
of thegovernment–hencebourgeois forceswereable to sabotage it fromits
infancy. In order to implement the law, a national socialisation commission
withBaueratthehelmwassetup.93Theelectionresultsof16February1919,the
nationalconferenceofworkers’andsoldiers’councilson1March1919,andthe
numerical growthof theCommunist Party all helped tohasten the socialisa-
tionproject.Theseeventsall testifiedtotheradicalmoodamongtheworking
masses.Inthespringof1919,thebourgeoisblocassumedaconciliatoryattitude
towardthesocialisationprogramme–evidently,itfearedthatanyresistanceon
itspartmightescalatesocialupheavals.
Bauer took upon himself the task of drafting a socialisation programme.
As early as January 1919, he outlined the central ideas of the socialisation
92 SeeTäubler 1919.CompareAlbers1979,p.32.
93 The commission largely consisted of politicians rather than economic experts, which
would have negatively affected the content and practice of socialisation. Among their
memberswere fivenationalassemblyrepresentatives, twodelegates fromthesdap, two
fromtheChristianSocials,andonefromtheGreaterGermans.Asocialisationcommission
had been convened in Germany prior to that, yet the German Social Democrats and
government were unable to work out a clear socialisation programme. In contrast to
Austria, the socialisation programme in Germanymainly interested the Independent
SocialDemocraticPartyofGermany(uspd).
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