What can contemporary activists and political theorists learn from the life and work of Rosa Luxemburg? Examining her contribution to radical democracy and revolutionary socialism, Jon Nixon shows why Red Rosa’s legacy lives on.
Luxemburg’s political and intellectual formation was in itself a ‘long revolution’, conceived of over time and in response to world events; her groundbreaking ideas around internationalism and spontaneity were formulated in the context of revolution. Returning to her thinking on global capitalism, democratic renewal, state militarism, and the social question, Nixon draws out the enduring nature of her work, using her framework of ideas as a lens through which to view the contemporary debates.
By establishing a rich and distinctive account of Luxemburg, Nixon makes the argument for why her struggle for democratic renewal is as relevant as ever.
Содержание
Preface
Acknowledgements
A Note to the Reader
PART I — TAKING HISTORY AS IT COMES
1. The Long Apprenticeship
2. Entering History
PART II — THE WORLD UPSIDE DOWN
3. Political Struggle
4. Political Agency
5. Political Purpose
PART III — THINKING DIFFERENTLY
6. History is Now
7. The Long Revolution
Coda: ‘I Was I Am I Shall Be’
Glossary: Dates and Events, Organisations and People
Notes
References
Index
Об авторе
Jon Nixon is Honorary Professor within the Education University of Hong Kong and Visiting Professor at Middlesex University, UK. He has written widely on cultural and intellectual history. His recent books include Hans-Georg Gadamer: The Hermeneutical Imagination (Springer, 2017), Hannah Arendt and the Politics of Friendship (Bloomsbury, 2015), Higher Education and the Public Good (Bloomsbury, 2012) and Rosa Luxemburg and the Struggle for Democratic Renewal (Pluto, 2018).