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dc.contributor.authorSchmidt, Ingo
dc.date.accessioned2012-11-15T21:28:46Z
dc.date.available2012-11-15T21:28:46Z
dc.date.issued2012-11-15T21:28:46Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2149/3234
dc.descriptionI attended the 2012 Congress of the Humanities and Social Sciences in Waterloo, ON, as Chair of the Program Committee of the Society for Socialist Studies. I presented a paper on my ongoing research on Rosa Luxemburg, which was discussed by a group of Luxemburg scholars from Canada, Germany, and the US. Together with some of the contributors to my Social Democracy After the Cold War, co-edited with Bryan Evans and coming out from AU Press this month, I took part in a ‘pre-book-launch’ and chaired a number of other sessions as well. These multiple engagements at Congress sparked a series of ideas that feed into the development of AU’s Labour Studies Program and the Centre for Inerdisciplinary Studies.en
dc.description.abstractSince her assassination, Rosa Luxemburg has been treated as an icon while her political and theoretical work is largely forgotten, neglected, or rejected. Recently, though, David Harvey used her ideas on capitalist expansion to explain the new imperialism. Other elements of her work are promising for socialist studies and the left, today. Her analysis of mass strikes in Russia in 1905, for example, may cast new light on workers’ struggles in China. Luxemburg’s critical discussion of nations’ right to self-determination inform, or ought to inform, contemporary Latin American struggles against imperialist domination. Her writings on mass strikes, parties and trade unions, like her better-known writings on ‘social reform or revolution’, offer insights into the role of (weakly) organized labour in political change.en
dc.language.isoenen
dc.relation.ispartofseries83.R020.1305;
dc.subjectRosa Luxemburgen
dc.subjectCapitalisten
dc.subjectSocialist Studiesen
dc.titlePolitical Economy and History – the Case of Luxemburg’s Accumulation of Capitalen
dc.typePresentationen


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