Most (Johann), 29 Mühsam (Erich), 185, 439 Müller (Hans Harald), 159, 190, 391, 403 Multatuli, 56 Munis (Grandizo), 345, 378 Münzenberg (Willi), 123, 140, 168, 203 Mussert (Anton), 292, 335, 339 Mussolini (Benito), 108, 303, 322 Nansink (Bertus), 346-347, 378, 380 Napoleon I, 22 NAS, 31, 41, 43, 54-55, 66, 69-70, 87, 114, 132-134, 138, 140, 146, 152, 171-172, 186, 204, 223, 237, 283, 331-333, 337-338, 342, 346, 351, 359, 362, 395, 412, 448 NCPN, 141, 448 Nedyalkov (Dimitar), 207, 395 Nedyalkov (Ivan), Nelles (Dieter), 398, 402 Nettl (J. P.), 66, 99, 409 Neurath (Otto), 282 Newton (Isaac), 274 Nosovitsky (Jakob), 171 Noske (Gustav), 104, 128, 144, 175, 238 NSB, 292, 335, 339, 448 NSV, 448 Nugter (J.N.), 208 NVSTP, 55, 448 NVV, 32, 43, 55, 66, 70, 128, 133-134, 186, 331-332, 339, 362, 448 Oehler (Hugo), 319, 322 Oehlschläger (Hugo), 207 Onasch (Johann), 170, 278 Ortmans (Fred), 6, 285 Osinski [Obolensky (Valerian Valerianovitch), known as], 278, 295, 305 OSP, 211, 218, 299, 304, 331-332, 341, 343, 346, 378, 401-402, 429, 448 Otterloo (Jaap van), 344 Oudegeest (Jan), 36, 39, 131 OVB, 363, 378, 381, 449 Oven (Wilfried von), 246 Paepe (César de), 29 Pankhurst (Sylvia), 146, 150-151, 155, 169-171, 193, 198, 209, 402, 411, 419, 431-432, 446 Pannekoek (Anton) [ps. : Braak; Horner (Karl); L. V.; van Loo; Harper (John); Aartsz (P.)], 2-4, 11-13, 16- 17, 19, 20, 33-35, 37-38, 41-42, 44, 46, 48, 52, 58, 60- 91, 93-110, 116-120, 122-124-127, 129-131, 135-138, 140-141, 144, 146-150, 153-155, 158-160, 162-163, 165-167, 169-171, 174-175, 178-179, 181, 185-187, 190, 202-206, 210, 220-223, 230-234, 239-240, 243, 245, 247-249, 255-256, 258, 261-263, 266, 270-280, 282-286, 290-291, 293, 297-298, 304-306, 327-331, 340-341, 353, 355, 358, 360-361, 363-366, 368, 371, 374, 375, 377, 379-393, 395, 397, 400-401, 404, 411- 412, 414-416, 423, 425, 427-428, 434-435, 437, 439 Pannekoek – Nassau Noordewier (Anna), 97 Parlow (Fritz), 375, 383, 407, 423 Paris (Robert), 99 Partos, Paul (alias: Polgare), 262 Parvus [ps: of Helphand (Alexander)], 90, 108 Pasha (Enver), 179 Passlack (Wilhelm), 206 PCF, 300, 449 PCI, 169, 375 PCInt, 223, 356, 367, 449 Pelgrom (Rinus), 244, 320 Pennetier (Claude), 312-313, 433-434 Peregalli (Arturo), 5, 276, 367 Perrone (Ottorino) [alias: Vercesi, or Philippe], 282, 302, 306, 329, 330, 341 Perthus (Max) [ps. and nom de plume of Van t’Hart (Piet)], 73, 333, 338, 340-343, 345, 378 Petrov (Georgi), 185, 202 Pfemfert (Franz), 153, 172-174, 203, 207, 228, 244-245, 393, 405-407, 433 Philip II (king of Spain), 21 Philips (Anton), 22 Philips (Lion), 63 Philipps (Richard Charles), 168, 172 Pieck (Wilhelm), 57 Pinkowski [alias Buckow (Franz)], 173 Pinkus (<strong>The</strong>o), 379 Pivert (Marceau), 332 Plaskett (John Stanley), 99 Platten (Friz), 130 Plättner (Karl) [alias Braun; or Schuster], 182-183, 202, 395, 405, 420, 435 Plekhanov (Georgi Valentinovich), 10, 80, 85, 106-107, 275-276, 278, 279, 286 398
Plivier (<strong>The</strong>odor), 207 PKI, 56, 429, 437-439 PNI, 59, 449 POB, 29, 88, 419, 449 Polak (Henri), 36, 41, 65, 67 Pönisch (Ernst), 383 Poppe (Constant Johan Hendrik; or Stan) [alias: Woudstra (Tjeerd)], 6, 333, 338-339, 341, 343, 345- 378, 380, 388, 402 POUM, 310-311, 317-320, 322, 332, 378, 384, 449 Posner, 137 Prenzlow (Max), 167 Prodanov [ps. of Popov (Ivan)], 204, 205 Proletenstemmen (group), 197, 203, 205, 240, 287, 293, 298, 378-379, Proost (Johannes) [ps.: Jansen], 206 Prost (Antoine), 5, 280 Proudhon (Pierre Joseph), 43, 178, 227 PSOE, 449 Prudhommeaux (André) [ps.: Jolibois (André); Cello (Jean) & Prunier (André)], 6, 168, 246, 249, 402, 410 PSOP, 322, 332, 449 PSP, 249, 449 PvdA, 68, 211, 249, 378, 449 Quarg (Otto), 406 Querido (Emanuel), 68, 137, 141, 174, 244, 434 Querido (Israël), 241 RAC, 204, 449 Radek (Karl), 65, 74, 77, 98, 116, 123-124, 130, 138- 139, 147-148, 157, 170-172, 179, 181, 188, 200, 278, 394, 404, 436-437 Radencommunist (group), 217, 221, 226, 278, 292, 379 Radt (Richard), 407 Ransome (Arthur), 144, 168 Rasch (Fritz), 157, 174, 183 Rathenau (Walther), 179 Raukitis (Willy), 381 Ravesteyn (Willem van), 34, 36-38, 44, 50, 55, 58, 62- 63, 68, 70-72, 78, 115, 123, 126, 129, 131-132, 136, 138, 139-140, 149, 186, 204, 393, 401 Rebérioux (Madeleine), 2, 5, 65 RCP, 362, 378, 449 Reens (Rosa), 207 Reesema (William Carl Siewertsz van), 126-127, 132, 139 RGASPI, 390, 392, 434, 439 Riel (Richard van), 218 [See: Manuel (Richard)] Reve (Gerard van het), 67, 328 Reichenbach (Bernard) [alias: Seemann (Johannes)], 154, 173, 196, 200, 202, 205, 252, 281, 305, 321, 393, 407, 422, 433, 435 Reichenbach (Hans), 282 Reimers (Otto), 383, 407, 409 Rembrandt, 136 Remmele (Hermann), 244 Riazanov (David Borisovitch), 181, 278, 286 Riésel (René), 386 Rijnders (Gerhard), 91, 271 Ritter (Ernst), 189-190, 284, 376 RKD, 6, 345, 378-379, 381, 410, 449 Roche (Karl), 421 Rock (Christian), 209 Roebers (Johan Hendrik), 339 Röhm (Ernst), 227 Rojahn (Jürgen), 130, 428 Roland Holst – van der Schalk (Henriëtte Goverdine Anna) [ps.: Jet; “In liefde bloeiende”], 25, 34, 36-38, 42, 46, 49-53, 55, 60-61, 63, 67-69, 71-73, 76, 78, 80- 81, 89-93, 105-106, 108, 112, 116, 119, 121-124, 127, 135-138, 149-150, 158, 175, 186-187, 204, 390-391, 393, 401, 404, 413, 420, 428-429 Rolland (Romain), 236 Romijn (Wijnand) [ps.: Socius; Montagnard], 319, 349- 350, 382 Roodzant (D.), 208 Rosdolsky (Roman), 96 Rosenberg (Arthur), 393, 394, 395, 396 Rote Kämpfer (RK), 172, 200, 202, 209-210, 236, 240, 252, 254, 280-281, 283, 305, 318, 321, 375, 384, 402- 404, 406, 413, 421-423, 426, 435-437, 449-450 Rot (A.), 207 Rot (Thomas, or Tom), 304, 400 Roth (Karl-Heinz), 391 Rous (Jean), 322 RSAP, 32, 135, 217, 218, 283, 301-302, 304, 310-311, 316, 327, 331-334, 338-339, 341-342, 345-347, 350, 358, 366, 368, 378, 382, 401-402, 429, 449 RSC, 125, 128, 134, 139, 449 RSDLP, 46, 85, 250, 254, 413 RSP, 135, 218, 331-332, 341, 346, 401, 429, 449 RSV, 121, 123-124, 135, 137, 401, 449 Rubel (Maximilien), 107, 402, 410, 439 399
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PHILIPPE BOURRINET The Dutch and Ge
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The Dutch and German Communist Left
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General studies ...................
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INTRODUCTION Despite the theoretica
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In fact, it was not the GIC, but th
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history of the Dutch communist curr
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Chapter 1: Origins and Formation of
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1862-1866, 1871-1872); these conser
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Dutch and German workers’ movemen
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However, this ‘radicalism’ of D
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emained an internationalist. It is
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a formidable weapon against the lef
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form the Tribunist movement: Mendel
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of the organisation. 31 He only dev
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The support given to the various re
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Using the pretext of the struggle a
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the end of 1903. 57 By contrast, a
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Bolsheviks had deputies in the Duma
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imposed to form an organised fracti
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was obliged to include in the pream
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‘right’ 100 - which was based i
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This was the beginning of an increa
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carried out by the SDP - in the for
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The growth of Dutch imperialism cou
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Wijnkoop’s suggestion, the SDP’
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evolution. 125 Right up until the w
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helped to write the pamphlet addres
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section, supported a counter-resolu
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Chapter 2 Pannekoek and ‘Dutch’
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The philosophical bases of radical
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Wrongly presented by its opponents
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is most necessary. Only knowledge g
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ended in defeat - but whatever help
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The Dutch Left never considered the
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ourgeois revolutions, thinks of not
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eligious faith in the success of th
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organisations they had so patiently
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forces... The most backward country
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mass strikes; the proletariat’s s
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‘Great Night’: “[passive radi
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economic, and whose political domin
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letter to Paul Lafargue (20 th June
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Luxemburg in urging a clear rejecti
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explicit criticism of their leaders
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As in most of the belligerent count
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the main goal was the return to pea
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Gorter’s analyses were remarkable
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political factors which led to this
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During 1915, opposition to the war
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inform its readers about the Confer
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It is noteworthy that Roland Holst
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powerful opposition to this policy
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The workers’ reaction was immedia
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concealed the Wijnkoop leadership
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Lenin was quite right to emphasise
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“Don’t you feel, little by litt
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dissolved itself. There only remain
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Chapter 4 THE DUTCH LEFT IN THE KOM
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Spartakusbund not rejected particip
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However, the circular of the Komint
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Kommunist, publication of the Breme
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Russians - like Trotsky 433 - no lo
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The resolution adopted by the confe
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Led by Wolffheim and Laufenberg, th
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Pannekoek’s great clear-sightedne
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Rühle’s anti-party current. But
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All these accusations fail to stand
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not that of a general staff, in whi
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democrats and bourgeois in the war
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The unions also resemble the state
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eal decision-making centre. In this
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communism extends from the Rhine to
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The NEP (New Economic Policy) in th
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and the workers, who had all been a
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However, all the left communists, G
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was more disastrous for the VKPD th
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At its 3 rd Congress, the Komintern
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when he was in fact in Spain at the
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workers, and that every three month
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committee is also of the opinion th
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large towns passed from capitalism
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KAI would be “infinitely difficul
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private property”. They constitut
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side, of two KAPDs, with two papers
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intention of working for the reunif
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‘old enemy’ Paul Levi. 650 Deth
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district in Amsterdam, condemning a
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THE GROUP OF INTERNATIONAL COMMUNIS
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the Dutch theoretical review Radenc
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the CPO decided to dissolve in orde
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political sleep by the crisis of th
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economic, rather than the political
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the nationalist, even anti-Semitic
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parliamentary stipend financed the
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shreds”. 706 But significantly, t
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KAPD. The GIC, followed by Pannekoe
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It was a party which dared not spea
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a big impact in the unemployed move
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anarchist group like the BAS was ch
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The other factor in the defeat of t
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would ‘awaken’ the German prole
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Spartacus, organ of the LAO, while
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Chapter 7 TOWARDS A NEW WORKERS’
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The evolution of the Dutch GIC towa
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the world, especially since 1968. 7
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Secondly, by trying at all costs to
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In a contradictory way, the GIC rep
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The ‘new workers’ movement’ a
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The function and functioning of the
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een eclipsed and replaced by a “d
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and developed since the birth of th
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GIC recognised the fundamental role
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This view has a certain resemblance
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“At the beginning of the period o
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Bogdanov, the social process was re
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to construct a coherent and ordered
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“As soon as the proletarian class
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the danger of state capitalism. The
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inseparable from the anti-organisat
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growing uncertainty of existence is
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indivisible unity operating like th
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“freedoms” and the introduction
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Steuermann 972 , Rühle showed that
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Russian capitalism. It was only con
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The unemployed workers of Amsterdam
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Unlike the Paul Mattick group in th
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The contribution by this group, whi
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Chapter 9 THE DUTCH INTERNATIONALIS
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workers’ councils”, the KAPN’
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impoverished peasants and, on the o
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The first ‘minority’ was formed
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iting, since the Dutch RSAP and the
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seems to have come from an ex-membe
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esult which appeared positive to th
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Chapter 10 FROM THE “MARX - LENIN
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to the previous history of Germany
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posterity a political, as much as a
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Council communist theory had a revo
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organisations together, including t
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This ‘broad’ policy towards oth
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The MLL Front played a considerable
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workers had been liquidated. A tota
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Chapter 11 The Communistenbond Spar
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political past, marked less by synd
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process, and “the [capitalist] sy
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organisation, once theoretical and
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organisation: “The Bond is a temp
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The implicit rejection of the Russi
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the ‘right’ to speak in the Ber
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slavenmaatschappij tot arbeidersmac
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In 1945-46, the Bond examined sever
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Luxemburg’s conception, it was fo
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draws in ever greater masses. [...]
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The onset of the Cold War left the
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- General rejection of all groups t
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disappeared in 1948. Canne-Meijer w
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Bond arrived at the idea that the R
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After World War II council communis
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joined the left wing of the SPD or
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Like SB, it paraded a strong anti-b
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If ‘councilism’ as an organised
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The history of the Dutch and German
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organisational discipline, both exp
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looked to changes in the sociologic
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The criticisms put forward by Geyer
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BIBLIOGRAPHY A bibliography on the
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Stan POPPE (1899-1991) archives: mi
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Rote Armee (constituted in April 19
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Korrespondenz-Blatt der KAPD, ‚an
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‘Monatsblätter aus der Jugendbew
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Nasha Duma, Sofia, Oct. - Dec. 1919
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THE NETHERLANDS The Dutch communist
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Uit eigen kring; intern orgaan (the
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- 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 394 and 395: Fischer (Ruth) [Eisler (Elfriede),
- Page 396 and 397: KAPN, 17, 138, 172, 187, 199, 204-2
- Page 400 and 401: Rühle (Otto), 13, 17, 21, 62, 120,
- Page 402 and 403: Vonk (group De), 324, 329, 337, 351