Fischer (Ruth) [Eisler (Elfriede), known as], 168, 172, 222, 228, 244, 319, 322, 417-418, 442 Fittkow (Hans), 380 Flachmann (Albert), 437 Foot (Paul), 115 Fortuijn (Jan Antoon), 64 Fourier (Charles), 266 Fraina (Louis Charles) [alias Corey (Lewis)], 144, 146, 150, 151, 152, 168, 171, 172 Franck (Philipp), 282 Franck (Sebastian) [ps. of Jacoby (Henry)], 375, 425 Franco y Bahamonde (Francisco), 310-313, 315, 320, 435 Frank (Pierre), 333, 334 Frey (Josef), 204 Friedländer (Käthe), 205, 209 Frölich (Paul), 150, 244 Frossard (Ludovic Oscar) 149 FSA, 447 Gallacher (William), 169, 175 Ganchev (Ivan), 169, 187, 204-205, 209, 431 Gandhi (Mohandas Karamchand), 36, 68, 138 Gans (Isaäc, or Jacques), 196, 200, 224 Garrett (George), 203 GBL, 332, 334, 378, 447 GCF, 277, 356, 371, 373 Geer (Dirk Jan de), 299 Geers (Gerard), 187, 204, 210 Geiger (Stanislaus), 210, 409 Gerber (John), 413, 432 Gerhard (Hendrik), 25 Gerritsen (Cornelus), 330, 336, 340 Geyer (Curt), 393-394, 396 GIC, 3, 4, 6, 12-13, 17-21, 68, 173, 178, 199, 211-224, 227, 230-271, 280-284, 289-294, 296-307, 309-320,- 322, 326, 331, 341-342, 347, 350-352, 359-360, 365- 366, 368-370-372, 379, 381-382, 385, 391-392, 403, 407, 409-413, 423-425, 429, 435, 447, 449 Gide (André), 425 GIK, 246, 251, 385, 425, 447, 449 GIS, 374-375, 407-408, 447 Glusberg (Samuel) [nom de plume: Espinoza (Enrique)], 349 Goebbels (Joseph), 248 Goedhart (Frans Johannes) [ps.: Pieter ‘t Hoen], 196, 200, 224 Goerdeler (Carl Friedrich), 374 Goes (Franc van der), 30-31, 34-36, 38, 46, 50, 53, 66, 70-71, 89, 113, 124, 331, 401 Goethe (Johann Wolfgang von), 169 Goldstein (Arthur) [alias Stahl], 157, 173, 181, 193-194, 196, 198, 200, 202, 210, 252, 281, 405, 422, 435 Goldštajn (Solomon Lazarov) [See: Zidarov (Slavi)] Gorkin (Juan), 384 Gorky (Maxim), 236, 273, 285 Gorter (Herman), 2, 3, 11-13, 16-17, 19-20, 32, 34-38, 42-46, 48-55, 60-63, 66-72, 76-78, 80-82, 86, 89, 105- 106, 108, 110, 113, 115-127, 129, 130-132, 135-141, 144, 146, 149, 150, 153-155, 157-167, 169-170, 173- 176, 178, 180, 181, 183-185, 189-194, 196-197, 199- 200, 202-204, 206-208, 211, 219-220, 222-223, 227, 244, 255-256, 259, 278, 285, 293, 339, 369, 377-378, 382, 385, 388, 390-392, 395, 397, 400-401, 405, 411, 414-415, 417, 419-420, 422, 426, 428-430, 434, 438 Gottberg (Otto) [alias: Ackermann?]196, 209 Goulooze (Daniël), 220, 436 Gramsci (Antonio), 106, 145, 153, 174, 279, 364, 445 Graudenz (John) [alias Tissen], 427 Grave (Jean), 32 Grimm (Robert), 62, 122 Groot (Saul, or Paul de), 222, 441 Grossmann (Henryk), 290-292, 304, 386, 402 Grove (Janet), 206 Grulovic, 207 Grünenberg (Antonia), 64-65, 101-103 Guerdjikov (Mikhail), Gurinov, 204 Guillaume (Pierre), 374 Guttmann (Katharine Mathilde Margarete, or Ketty), 422 Haan-Zwagerman (Trien de), 333 Haekel (Ernst), 275, 286 Hagen (Leo), 222 Halkes (Jan), 206 Happ (Carl) [ps.: Schlicht (Carl)], 172-173, 206, 244-245 Harmsen (Ger), 132, 215, 238, 418-419, 425-427, 432 Harper (John) [see: Pannekoek (Anton)] Harteveld (Simon), 224 Hasselmann (Willhelm), 29 Haupt (Georges), 7-8, 10-11, 63, 69, 105, 189, 200, 278, 431 Hegel, 77, 276 Heinrich (A.), 233, 407 394
Helm (Heinz) [alias: Einzelmann], 173, 233, 431 Helsdingen (Willem Pieter Gerardus), 66 Henke (Alfred), 64, 73, 404 Hennaut (Adhemar), 169, 218, 223, 282, 284, 317, 319, 320, 322 Herrmann (Gustav), 206 Herzog (Jakob), 150 Heynemann (Heinrich), 403 Hilferding (Rudolf), 61-62, 76, 296 Hippe (Oskar), 374 Hitler (Adolf), 3, 210, 221, 224, 227, 238-241, 258, 303, 305, 327, 333, 343, 374, 385, 408, 427 Hobijn (J.L.), 188 Hodgson (J.F.), 209 Höglund (Zeth), 165, 169 Hölz (Max), 182-183, 202-203, 395, 425, 435, 441 Hoorn (P.F.), 208 Horkheimer (Max), 281 Horner (Karl) [See: Pannekoek (Anton)] Hornstra (Lieuwe, or Leo), 239, 247 Huhn (Willy), 373, 375, 384, 408, 423 Humbert-Droz (Jules), 136, 137 Husserl (Edmund), 292 Huysmans (Camille), 34, 51 IAK, 447 IAMB, 447 IAMV, 114, 126, 447 IARV, 283, 321, 322, 447 ICC, 204, 217, 277, 279, 298, 312, 372, 374-375, 404, 410, 413 ICO, 223, 306, 376, 380, 385, 386, 420, 447 IFBK, 369, 371, 447 Ignatov (Efim Nikitich), 202 IISG, 5, 67, 136, 199-200, 203, 217, 238-239, 278, 296, 390-392, 394, 408, 411, 426, 418419, 429-430, 433- 434, 437 Ijmkers (Aaldert), 339 Ihlau (Olaf), 197, 273, 373, 414 IKD, 63-64, 74, 172, 384, 405, 411, 425, 447 ILP, 151, 414, 447 Indische Partij, 55-56 INO, 235, 246-247, 251, 407, 447 IPSO, 136, 392, 418, 433, 437 ISB, 34, 51, 52, 67, 71, 447 ISDV, 59, 60, 448 ITF, 55, 448 ITWF, 54, 448 Ivanov (Stefan), 172 IWW, 21, 69, 87, 145-147, 150-151, 164, 168, 171, 188, 234-235, 245-246, 291, 304, 374, 383, 395-396, 406, 408, 409-410, 421, 430, 432, 448 Jacoby (Henry) [alias: Franck (Sebastian)], 375, 384, 402, 417, 434 Jacquemotte (Joseph), 169 Jacquier (Maurice), 322 Jansen [ps. of Proost (Johannes)], Janssen (J.J.), 204, 207 Jaurès (Jean), 37, 55, 56, 72, 100, 115, 247 Jelinek (Willy), 375 Joël (Ernst), 199, 407 Jogisches (Leo), 145 Jong (Albert de), 62, 64, 134, 356 Jong (Frits de), 61 Jong (Rudolf de), 124, 299, 399, 407 Jordens (Gerrit), 187, 210, 285, 401, 443 Joubert (Jean-Pierre), 319 Juhl (Carsten), 352 Jung (Cläre), 207, 423 Jung (Franz), 156, 158, 172, 183, 209, 210, 224, 425, 427, 433 Junkers (Hugo), 206 Kabaktchiev (Khristo), 154 Kadt (Jacques de), 131, 198, 205, 211, 291, 321, 415 Kagan (Heinz), 205 KAI, 3, 17, 170, 173, 178, 185, 189-200, 204, 207-210, 224, 227, 244, 391, 401-402, 405-406, 408-409, 411, 421-422, 446, 448 KAJ, 199, 208, 383, 442, 448 Kalbitzer (Walter), 196, 209 Kalinin (Mikhail Ivanovitch), 180 Kamenev (Lev Borisovich), 62, 201, 258 Kamenev (Sergei Sergeevich), 181 Kant (Immanuel), 36, 76, 79, 80, 105, 272 KAPD, 3, 6, 11-13, 16-20, 105, 135, 141, 147, 151-158, 160-161, 169-170, 172-175, 178, 180-184, 186, 188- 196, 198-200, 202-211, 215-216, 220-222, 224, 227- 236, 238, 240, 244-249, 251-253, 261, 280-282, 284, 291, 305, 307, 322, 351, 354-355, 358, 363, 369, 373, 375, 383, 385-386, 388, 391-392, 394-397, 400-406, 408, 410-411, 413, 420-423, 425-428, 432-433, 438, 441-443, 447-448 395
- Page 1 and 2:
PHILIPPE BOURRINET The Dutch and Ge
- Page 4 and 5:
The Dutch and German Communist Left
- Page 6 and 7:
General studies ...................
- Page 8 and 9:
INTRODUCTION Despite the theoretica
- Page 10 and 11:
In fact, it was not the GIC, but th
- Page 12 and 13:
history of the Dutch communist curr
- Page 14 and 15:
Chapter 1: Origins and Formation of
- Page 16 and 17:
1862-1866, 1871-1872); these conser
- Page 18 and 19:
Dutch and German workers’ movemen
- Page 20 and 21:
However, this ‘radicalism’ of D
- Page 22 and 23:
emained an internationalist. It is
- Page 24 and 25:
a formidable weapon against the lef
- Page 26 and 27:
form the Tribunist movement: Mendel
- Page 28 and 29:
of the organisation. 31 He only dev
- Page 30 and 31:
The support given to the various re
- Page 32 and 33:
Using the pretext of the struggle a
- Page 34 and 35:
the end of 1903. 57 By contrast, a
- Page 36 and 37:
Bolsheviks had deputies in the Duma
- Page 38 and 39:
imposed to form an organised fracti
- Page 40 and 41:
was obliged to include in the pream
- Page 42 and 43:
‘right’ 100 - which was based i
- Page 44 and 45:
This was the beginning of an increa
- Page 46 and 47:
carried out by the SDP - in the for
- Page 48 and 49:
The growth of Dutch imperialism cou
- Page 50 and 51:
Wijnkoop’s suggestion, the SDP’
- Page 52 and 53:
evolution. 125 Right up until the w
- Page 54 and 55:
helped to write the pamphlet addres
- Page 56 and 57:
section, supported a counter-resolu
- Page 58 and 59:
Chapter 2 Pannekoek and ‘Dutch’
- Page 60 and 61:
The philosophical bases of radical
- Page 62 and 63:
Wrongly presented by its opponents
- Page 64 and 65:
is most necessary. Only knowledge g
- Page 66 and 67:
ended in defeat - but whatever help
- Page 68 and 69:
The Dutch Left never considered the
- Page 70 and 71:
ourgeois revolutions, thinks of not
- Page 72 and 73:
eligious faith in the success of th
- Page 74 and 75:
organisations they had so patiently
- Page 76 and 77:
forces... The most backward country
- Page 78 and 79:
mass strikes; the proletariat’s s
- Page 80 and 81:
‘Great Night’: “[passive radi
- Page 82 and 83:
economic, and whose political domin
- Page 84 and 85:
letter to Paul Lafargue (20 th June
- Page 86 and 87:
Luxemburg in urging a clear rejecti
- Page 88 and 89:
explicit criticism of their leaders
- Page 90 and 91:
As in most of the belligerent count
- Page 92 and 93:
the main goal was the return to pea
- Page 94 and 95:
Gorter’s analyses were remarkable
- Page 96 and 97:
political factors which led to this
- Page 98 and 99:
During 1915, opposition to the war
- Page 100 and 101:
inform its readers about the Confer
- Page 102 and 103:
It is noteworthy that Roland Holst
- Page 104 and 105:
powerful opposition to this policy
- Page 106 and 107:
The workers’ reaction was immedia
- Page 108 and 109:
concealed the Wijnkoop leadership
- Page 110 and 111:
Lenin was quite right to emphasise
- Page 112 and 113:
“Don’t you feel, little by litt
- Page 114 and 115:
dissolved itself. There only remain
- Page 116 and 117:
Chapter 4 THE DUTCH LEFT IN THE KOM
- Page 118 and 119:
Spartakusbund not rejected particip
- Page 120 and 121:
However, the circular of the Komint
- Page 122 and 123:
Kommunist, publication of the Breme
- Page 124 and 125:
Russians - like Trotsky 433 - no lo
- Page 126 and 127:
The resolution adopted by the confe
- Page 128 and 129:
Led by Wolffheim and Laufenberg, th
- Page 130 and 131:
Pannekoek’s great clear-sightedne
- Page 132 and 133:
Rühle’s anti-party current. But
- Page 134 and 135:
All these accusations fail to stand
- Page 136 and 137:
not that of a general staff, in whi
- Page 138 and 139:
democrats and bourgeois in the war
- Page 140 and 141:
The unions also resemble the state
- Page 142 and 143:
eal decision-making centre. In this
- Page 144 and 145:
communism extends from the Rhine to
- Page 146 and 147:
The NEP (New Economic Policy) in th
- Page 148 and 149:
and the workers, who had all been a
- Page 150 and 151:
However, all the left communists, G
- Page 152 and 153:
was more disastrous for the VKPD th
- Page 154 and 155:
At its 3 rd Congress, the Komintern
- Page 156 and 157:
when he was in fact in Spain at the
- Page 158 and 159:
workers, and that every three month
- Page 160 and 161:
committee is also of the opinion th
- Page 162 and 163:
large towns passed from capitalism
- Page 164 and 165:
KAI would be “infinitely difficul
- Page 166 and 167:
private property”. They constitut
- Page 168 and 169:
side, of two KAPDs, with two papers
- Page 170 and 171:
intention of working for the reunif
- Page 172 and 173:
‘old enemy’ Paul Levi. 650 Deth
- Page 174 and 175:
district in Amsterdam, condemning a
- Page 176 and 177:
THE GROUP OF INTERNATIONAL COMMUNIS
- Page 178 and 179:
the Dutch theoretical review Radenc
- Page 180 and 181:
the CPO decided to dissolve in orde
- Page 182 and 183:
political sleep by the crisis of th
- Page 184 and 185:
economic, rather than the political
- Page 186 and 187:
the nationalist, even anti-Semitic
- Page 188 and 189:
parliamentary stipend financed the
- Page 190 and 191:
shreds”. 706 But significantly, t
- Page 192 and 193:
KAPD. The GIC, followed by Pannekoe
- Page 194 and 195:
It was a party which dared not spea
- Page 196 and 197:
a big impact in the unemployed move
- Page 198 and 199:
anarchist group like the BAS was ch
- Page 200 and 201:
The other factor in the defeat of t
- Page 202 and 203:
would ‘awaken’ the German prole
- Page 204 and 205:
Spartacus, organ of the LAO, while
- Page 206 and 207:
Chapter 7 TOWARDS A NEW WORKERS’
- Page 208 and 209:
The evolution of the Dutch GIC towa
- Page 210 and 211:
the world, especially since 1968. 7
- Page 212 and 213:
Secondly, by trying at all costs to
- Page 214 and 215:
In a contradictory way, the GIC rep
- Page 216 and 217:
The ‘new workers’ movement’ a
- Page 218 and 219:
The function and functioning of the
- Page 220 and 221:
een eclipsed and replaced by a “d
- Page 222 and 223:
and developed since the birth of th
- Page 224 and 225:
GIC recognised the fundamental role
- Page 226 and 227:
This view has a certain resemblance
- Page 228 and 229:
“At the beginning of the period o
- Page 230 and 231:
Bogdanov, the social process was re
- Page 232 and 233:
to construct a coherent and ordered
- Page 234 and 235:
“As soon as the proletarian class
- Page 236 and 237:
the danger of state capitalism. The
- Page 238 and 239:
inseparable from the anti-organisat
- Page 240 and 241:
growing uncertainty of existence is
- Page 242 and 243:
indivisible unity operating like th
- Page 244 and 245:
“freedoms” and the introduction
- Page 246 and 247:
Steuermann 972 , Rühle showed that
- Page 248 and 249:
Russian capitalism. It was only con
- Page 250 and 251:
The unemployed workers of Amsterdam
- Page 252 and 253:
Unlike the Paul Mattick group in th
- Page 254 and 255:
The contribution by this group, whi
- Page 256 and 257:
Chapter 9 THE DUTCH INTERNATIONALIS
- Page 258 and 259:
workers’ councils”, the KAPN’
- Page 260 and 261:
impoverished peasants and, on the o
- Page 262 and 263:
The first ‘minority’ was formed
- Page 264 and 265:
iting, since the Dutch RSAP and the
- Page 266 and 267:
seems to have come from an ex-membe
- Page 268 and 269:
esult which appeared positive to th
- Page 270 and 271:
Chapter 10 FROM THE “MARX - LENIN
- Page 272 and 273:
to the previous history of Germany
- Page 274 and 275:
posterity a political, as much as a
- Page 276 and 277:
Council communist theory had a revo
- Page 278 and 279:
organisations together, including t
- Page 280 and 281:
This ‘broad’ policy towards oth
- Page 282 and 283:
The MLL Front played a considerable
- Page 284 and 285:
workers had been liquidated. A tota
- Page 286 and 287:
Chapter 11 The Communistenbond Spar
- Page 288 and 289:
political past, marked less by synd
- Page 290 and 291:
process, and “the [capitalist] sy
- Page 292 and 293:
organisation, once theoretical and
- Page 294 and 295:
organisation: “The Bond is a temp
- Page 296 and 297:
The implicit rejection of the Russi
- Page 298 and 299:
the ‘right’ to speak in the Ber
- Page 300 and 301:
slavenmaatschappij tot arbeidersmac
- Page 302 and 303:
In 1945-46, the Bond examined sever
- Page 304 and 305:
Luxemburg’s conception, it was fo
- Page 306 and 307:
draws in ever greater masses. [...]
- Page 308 and 309:
The onset of the Cold War left the
- Page 310 and 311:
- General rejection of all groups t
- Page 312 and 313:
disappeared in 1948. Canne-Meijer w
- Page 314 and 315:
Bond arrived at the idea that the R
- Page 316 and 317:
After World War II council communis
- Page 318 and 319:
joined the left wing of the SPD or
- Page 320 and 321:
Like SB, it paraded a strong anti-b
- Page 322 and 323:
If ‘councilism’ as an organised
- Page 324 and 325:
The history of the Dutch and German
- Page 326 and 327:
organisational discipline, both exp
- Page 328 and 329:
looked to changes in the sociologic
- Page 330 and 331:
The criticisms put forward by Geyer
- Page 332 and 333:
BIBLIOGRAPHY A bibliography on the
- Page 334 and 335:
Stan POPPE (1899-1991) archives: mi
- Page 336 and 337:
Rote Armee (constituted in April 19
- Page 338 and 339:
Korrespondenz-Blatt der KAPD, ‚an
- Page 340 and 341:
‘Monatsblätter aus der Jugendbew
- Page 342 and 343:
Nasha Duma, Sofia, Oct. - Dec. 1919
- Page 344 and 345: THE NETHERLANDS The Dutch communist
- Page 346 and 347: Uit eigen kring; intern orgaan (the
- Page 348 and 349: (These latter two texts have been t
- Page 350 and 351: There is a good choice of texts, tr
- Page 352 and 353: Zur Psychologie des proletarisches
- Page 354 and 355: Marxism: last refuge of the bourgeo
- Page 356 and 357: (These texts are in Authier-Barrot,
- Page 358 and 359: Der Kampf um die Macht in der Gegen
- Page 360 and 361: Pamphlets by the Bulgarian left com
- Page 362 and 363: REICHENBACH (Bernard), ‘Moscow 19
- Page 364 and 365: ‚Über Karl Korsch’, in Jahrbuc
- Page 366 and 367: ROEGHOLT (Richter), Ben Sijes. Een
- Page 368 and 369: JANEV (Nikola), Balgarskata komunis
- Page 370 and 371: The ‘intellectual current’: lit
- Page 372 and 373: MALANDRINO (Corrado), ‘Anton Pann
- Page 374 and 375: BERENDSEN (Hans), & WEEDA (Rik), Ui
- Page 376 and 377: HARMSEN (Ger), Historisch overzicht
- Page 378 and 379: NGO VAN, Vietnam 1920-1945, révolu
- Page 380 and 381: WINCKLER (Heinrich August), Arbeite
- Page 382 and 383: Protokolle der Vereinigungs-Konfere
- Page 384 and 385: Fondazione Giangiacomo Feltrinelli,
- Page 386 and 387: CWI: Communist Workers’ Internati
- Page 388 and 389: NSV: Nederlandsch Syndikalistisch V
- Page 390 and 391: VOC: Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compa
- Page 392 and 393: Blackwell (Russell) [alias: Negrete
- Page 396 and 397: KAPN, 17, 138, 172, 187, 199, 204-2
- Page 398 and 399: Most (Johann), 29 Mühsam (Erich),
- Page 400 and 401: Rühle (Otto), 13, 17, 21, 62, 120,
- Page 402 and 403: Vonk (group De), 324, 329, 337, 351