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Norman Geras

    Norman Geras war emeritierter Professor für Staatswissenschaften an der University of Manchester. In seiner langen akademischen Laufbahn hat er wesentlich zur Analyse der Werke von Karl Marx beigetragen, insbesondere in seinem Buch "Marx and Human Nature" und dem Artikel "The Controversy About Marx and Justice", der ein Standardwerk zu diesem Thema geblieben ist. Seine wissenschaftliche Arbeit zeichnet sich durch eine tiefgreifende Auseinandersetzung und scharfsinnige Analyse der politischen Philosophie aus.

    The Contract of Mutual Indifference
    Legacy of Rosa Luxemburg
    • Legacy of Rosa Luxemburg

      • 210 Seiten
      • 8 Lesestunden
      3,7(3)Abgeben

      An important contribution to our understanding of twentieth-century Marxism During the first decades of the twentieth century, Rosa Luxemburg was the leader of the workers’ movement in Poland and Germany. She made a remarkable contribution to socialist theory and practice, yet her legacy remains in dispute. In this book Norman Geras interrogates and refutes the myths that have developed around her work. She was an opponent of socialist participation in the First World War and, as Geras shows, her views on socialist strategy in Russia were closer to Lenin’s than any other leader’s. Geras explores the development of Luxemburg’s critique in the period following the war and demonstrates how her thought is distinct from the social democratic or anarchist theories into which it is often subsumed. Geras brings new light to bear on one of the most misrepresented figures in radical history, illustrating her inspiring lack of complacency and her commitment to questioning those in authority on both the Right and the Left.

      Legacy of Rosa Luxemburg
    • 3,9(12)Abgeben

      Norman Geras discusses a central aspect of the experience of the Holocaust with a view to exploring its most important contemporary implications. Geras's argument focuses on the figure of the bystander to consider the moral consequences of looking on without active responses at persecution and great suffering. -- .

      The Contract of Mutual Indifference