Tactics and Ethics

Political Writings 1919-1929

$29.95 US
Verso Books | Verso
12 per carton
On sale Jan 01, 1972 | 9780902308985
Sales rights: US/CAN (No Open Mkt)

See Additional Formats
The articles and essays collected in this book were written during the decade of Lukács’s life when he was most active in politics. The first texts mark his transition from an anti-bourgeois aestheticism to Marxism and the newly founded Hungarian Communist Party. They are followed by material which displays the full range of his activity and thought during the subsequent ten years. Some of these essays were written when Lukács was deputy commissar of education in the embattled, short-lived Hungarian Soviet Republic. Others include the famous article on parliamentarianism which earned its author the respectful yet severe criticism of Lenin.

The volume includes short studies on German revisionism, Bukharin’s Marxism, and Karl Wittfogel, and longer pieces on Lassalle and Moses Hess. The collection ends with the theses Luckás wrote, under his cover name “Blum”, in opposition to the policies of the Third Period of the Comintern.
“An invaluable contribution to an understanding of Lukács’s work in the English-speaking world.”—Tribune

“Adds a new dimension to what English readers know about Lukács as a philosopher and literary critic ... They include the great theoretical essays on Moses Hess and Lassalle.”—Times Literary Supplement

About

The articles and essays collected in this book were written during the decade of Lukács’s life when he was most active in politics. The first texts mark his transition from an anti-bourgeois aestheticism to Marxism and the newly founded Hungarian Communist Party. They are followed by material which displays the full range of his activity and thought during the subsequent ten years. Some of these essays were written when Lukács was deputy commissar of education in the embattled, short-lived Hungarian Soviet Republic. Others include the famous article on parliamentarianism which earned its author the respectful yet severe criticism of Lenin.

The volume includes short studies on German revisionism, Bukharin’s Marxism, and Karl Wittfogel, and longer pieces on Lassalle and Moses Hess. The collection ends with the theses Luckás wrote, under his cover name “Blum”, in opposition to the policies of the Third Period of the Comintern.

Praise

“An invaluable contribution to an understanding of Lukács’s work in the English-speaking world.”—Tribune

“Adds a new dimension to what English readers know about Lukács as a philosopher and literary critic ... They include the great theoretical essays on Moses Hess and Lassalle.”—Times Literary Supplement