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Terms: great

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  • File Name: FM65ii.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: For Marx [Part 2]
  • 21 Occurence(s) of the search term greatDescription:
    She has at last seen this naked, cruel world where morality is nothing but a lie; she has realized that her safety lies in her own hands and that she can only reach the other world by selling the only goods at her disposal: her young bod.The great confrontation at the end of the third act is more than a confrontation between Nina and her father, it is the confrontation of a world without illusions with the wretched illusions of the 'heart', it is the confrontation of the real world with the melodramatic world, the dramatic access to consciousness that destroys the myths of melodrama, the very myths that Bertolazzi and Strehler are charged wit.Those who make this charge could quite easily have found in the play the criticism they tried to address to it from the stall

  • File Name: GLB78.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: The Great Leap Backward
  • 19 Occurence(s) of the search term greatDescription:
    114] From Marx to Mao Other Documents Reading Guide . The great Leap Backward CharlesBettelheim THEGREAT LEAP BACKWARD  From China Since Mao © 1978 by Monthly Review Press p.37-130   Prepared © for the Internet by David J. Romagnolo, djr@marx2mao.org (August 2000) page 37 THE GREAT LEAP BACKWARD by Charles Bettelheim March 3, 1978  "The history of all hitherto  existing society is the history of  class struggles"  -- Karl Marx and  Friedrich Engels,  Manifesto of the  Communist Party  Dear Neil Burton,     I read your letter of October 1, 1977, with great interest, and if I have not replied to it sooner this is because I was unable to do so owing to previous commitment

  • File Name: GS64.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: CPSU Leaders . . . Are the Greatest Splitters
  • 34 Occurence(s) of the search term greatDescription:
    360, 361. page 309 German socialist proletariat", adding, "I am convinced that a union on this basis will not last a year."[1]     In criticizing the Gotha Programme, Marx put forward the well-known principle that for Marxists "there would be no haggling about principles".[2]     Later Marx and Engels again sharply criticized the leaders of the German Party for tolerating the activities of the opportunists inside the Part.Marx said that these opportunists tried "to replace its materialistic basis . . . by modern mythology with its goddesses of Justice, Liberty, Equality, and Fraternity"[3] and that this was a "vulgarization of Party and theory".[4] In their "Circular Letter" to the leaders of the German Party, Marx and Engels wrote:     For almost forty years we have stressed the class struggle as the immediate driving power of history, and in particular the class struggle between bourgeoisie and proletariat as the great lever of the modern social revolution; it is, therefore, impossible for us to co-operate with people who wish to expunge this class struggle from the movement.[5]     Founded under Engels' influence in 1889, the Second International existed in a period when capitalism was developing "peacefull.While Marxism became widespread and the Communist Manifesto became the common programme of tens of millions of workers everywhere during this period, the socialist parties in many countries blindly worshipped     [1] "Engels to A. Bebel, March 18-28, 1875", Selected Correspondence of Marx and Engels, En

  • File Name: HCPSU39i.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: History of the C.P.S.U.(B.) -- Ch. 1-4
  • 30 Occurence(s) of the search term greatDescription:
    Retreat of the Revolution. First State Duma. Fourth (Unity) Party Con- gress Dispersion of the First State Dum.Convocation of the Second State Duma. Fifth Party Congress. Dispersion of the Second State Duma. Causes of the Defeat of the First Russian Revo- lution   54  58   62  77  80   88 Brief Summary 94  Chapter Four THE MENSHEVIKS AND THE BOLSHEVIKS IN THE PERIOD OF THE STOLYPIN REACTION. THE BOLSHEVIKS CONSTITUTE THEM- SELVES AN INDEPENDENT MARXIST PARTY (1908-1912) 1.       2. 3.   4.  5.  Stolypin Reaction. Disintegration Among the Oppositional Intelligentsia. Decadence. Desertion of a Section of the Party Intelligentsia to the Enemies of Marxism and Attempts to Revise the Theory of Marxism. Lenin's Rebutal of the Re- visionists in His Materialism and Empirio-Criticism and His Defence of the Theoretical Foundations of the Marxist Party Dialectical and Historical Materialism Bolsheviks and Mensheviks in the Period of the Stolypin Re- action. Struggle of the Bolsheviks Against the Liquidators and Otzovists Struggle of the Bolsheviks Against Trotskyism. Anti-Party August Bloc Prague Party Conference, 1912. Bolsheviks Constitute Them- selves an Independent Marxist Party      97 105  132 136 138 Brief Summary 143 page 1   I N T R O D U C T I O N     The Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolsheviks) has traversed a long and glorious road, leading from the first tiny Marxist circles and groups that appeared in Russia in the eighties of the past century to the great Party of the Bolsheviks, which now directs the first Socialist State of Workers and Peasants in the worl.     The C.P.S.U.(B.) grew up on the basis of the working-class movement in pre-revolutionary Russia; it sprang from the Marxist circles and groups which had established connection with the working-class movement and imparted to it a Socialist consciousnes

  • File Name: HCPSU39ii.html
    Modified: 20 August 2002
    Title: History of the C.P.S.U.(B.) -- Ch. 5-9
  • 39 Occurence(s) of the search term greatDescription:
    Not infrequently, considerable portions of confiscated issues of Pravda nevertheless found their way into the hands of readers, because the more active workers would come to the printing shop at night and carry away bundles of the newspape.     The tsarist government suppressed Pravda eight times in the space of two and a half years; but each time, with the support of the workers, it reappeared under a new but similar name, e.g., Za Pravdu (For Truth ), Put Pravdy (Path of Truth ), Trudovaya Pravda (Labour Truth ).     While the average circulation of Pravda was 40,000 copies per day, the circulation of Luch (Ray ), the Menshevik daily, did not exceed 15,000 or 16,000. page 150     The workers regarded Pravda as their own newspaper; they had great confidence in it and were very responsive to its call.Every copy was read by scores of readers, passing from hand to hand; it moulded their class consciousness, educated them, organized them, and summoned them to the struggl


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