Trotsky, Trotskyism and the Transition to Socialism

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20th Century
A01=Peter Beilharz
Author_Peter Beilharz
authoritarianism in socialism
Bolshevik Tradition
Category=QD
Communism
democratic socialism theoretical challenges
Department II
Deutscher's Argument
Deutscher's Work
Deutscher’s Argument
Deutscher’s Work
Die Neue Zeit
Direct Democracy
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Fourth International
Indian record
Jacobin legacy
Labour Ontology
Mandel Science
Mandel's Theory
Mandel’s Theory
Marx's Paris Manuscripts
Marxist Economic Theory
Marxist political theory
Marx’s Paris Manuscripts
Orthodox Trotskyists
Philosophy
philosophy of history debate
political economy
Political History
Political Theory
Raya Dunayevskaya
Revolution Betrayed
revolutionary left analysis
Russian State Capitalism
Self-developing Subject
socialist transition critique
Soviet socialism
Stalinism origins
Transitional Program
Trotsky's Analysis
Trotsky's Arguments
Trotsky's philosophy
Trotsky's Understanding
Trotsky's Work
Trotskyism's proposals
Trotskyist Tradition
Trotsky’s Analysis
Trotsky’s Arguments
Trotsky’s Understanding
Trotsky’s Work
Vice Versa
Young Trotsky

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367230586
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Dec 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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First published in 1987. Trotskyists have long dominated the revolutionary tradition on the Western left. Written from a critical socialist standpoint, this book provides an analysis of Trotskyism and argues that Trotskyism is increasingly irrelevant as a means of achieving socialism. It argues that, as the realisation grows that the revolutionary tradition and the authoritarianism which necessarily result from it are wrong, the importance of the problem of the transition to socialism increases. It argues that on this point Trotskyism is weak; that Trotskyism's proposals for socialist transition are largely rhetorical; and that its democratic impulse is weak. It supports this argument by showing that Trotsky’s philosophy of history, implicit in his writings, which the author characterises as evolutionary and necessitarian, coupled with a failure to grasp the moral basis of the socialist case, has a disabling effect on Trotsky's account of the transition to socialism and on his explanation of Stalinism. Moreover, it argues that Trotsky's intellectual and political heirs have been unable to escape from the contradictions inherent in his thought.

Peter Beilharz

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