View Full Version : recommend books
RATMfan1992
27th May 2013, 13:40
what are some good books to read and learn more about socialism/communism?
ВАЛТЕР
27th May 2013, 14:16
I always recommend these three for those just getting into communist thought.
The Principles of Communism
Wage Labour and Capital
The Communist Manifesto
You can find these and pretty much any other book you may need here for free.
http://marxists.org/
Brutus
27th May 2013, 14:27
A good overview is "The Class Struggle" by Karl Kautsky (http://www.marxists.org/archive/kautsky/1892/erfurt/)
The Idler
27th May 2013, 14:41
Anti-Bolshevik Communism, Paul Mattick
svenne
27th May 2013, 17:26
I suggest listening to ВАЛТЕР. But maybe i would add Value, price and profit, and the three books about french politics (they read a lot easier than the writings critiquening the political economy): The Class Struggle in France, 1848 to 1850, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte and The Civil War in France. If you start with Marx and Engels, you also don't have to (yet, at least) pick a side in what this site usually calls the tendency war. However, there's a couple of things to keep in mind:
- they wrote their books in the 19th century, which means a lot of the political positions they take were valid in that time, but maybe not today. Instead, look at how they came to their conclussions, watch the method they use.
- There's not one Marx or Engels, there are several. They chanced opinions several times (one example is the early belief that the average salary always was pushed against the bottom, something they didn't think 20 years later). Sometimes, these different points of view is at work in the same book.
- A lot of the books are in reality manuscripts or texts that Engels edited after the death of Karl Marx. While the opinions of the relationship between them differs between people, it's propably best to see them as two people working on the same project (call it the communist project or whatever), while at the same time not having exactly the same views of everything. As for the editor part on the behalf of Engels, the latest research shows that he made some pretty substantial changes in the second and third book of Capital.
- Sometimes, they are wrong. Don't use it as a bible, use it as a weapon. If you don't feel like spending a couple years reading thick books, you can at least throw Capital in the head of some smug upper middle class bastard, since it's a heavy book.
Tim Cornelis
27th May 2013, 17:30
The ABC of Communism.
Brutus
27th May 2013, 19:46
The ABC of Communism.
Is that the one by Bukharin?
Lenin1986
27th May 2013, 21:23
The books that most influence me are the communist manifesto by marx and engels, the state and revolution by V.I. Lenin, Reform or Revolution by Rosa Luxemburg and quotations of chairman mao
Dr Doom
27th May 2013, 21:59
this is a good intro.
capitalism and communism - dauve (http://www.prole.info/texts/capitalismandcommunism.html)
Tim Cornelis
27th May 2013, 22:14
Is that the one by Bukharin?
Yes (and Preobrazhensky).
Brutus
27th May 2013, 22:27
Yes (and Preobrazhensky).
I'm just going to say Bukharin...
This book is a brilliant introduction, written to explain communism to the masses in civil war Russia.
Pawn Power
27th May 2013, 23:17
Anything by Selma James.
Let's Get Free
28th May 2013, 00:13
http://libcom.org/files/The%20Invention%20of%20Capitalism.pdf
Geiseric
28th May 2013, 05:14
The transitional program by trotsky is substantial. It has to deal with the decaying epoch of capitalism which is what we're in.
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