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The long shadow of Leninist politics

radical strategy and revolutionary warfare after a century

Geoff Boucher

pp. 141-159

The underlying equation between revolutionary politics and military strategy in the work of Marx and Engels is well known. For the founders of Marxism, class struggle and revolutionary warfare are simply different intensities, different visibilities, of the same logic—"now hidden, now open"—of hostility (Marx 1986). If the class struggle over the working day represents a "veritable civil war" (Marx 1986: 231), and "every class struggle is a political struggle," then it is no surprise that class politics, the confrontation of class-on-class, vying for state power, "is the point where [civil] war breaks out into open revolution" (Marx 1986). Revolution is warfare. Politics is coercion. Exploitation is domination. The state is an instrument of repression—the repression of the producing class by the exploiting class. The political struggle involves latent violence. Accordingly, everyday class struggle is simply an asymmetrical civil war.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-50361-5_8

Full citation:

Boucher, G. (2017)., The long shadow of Leninist politics: radical strategy and revolutionary warfare after a century, in M. Sharpe, R. Jeffs & J. Reynolds (eds.), 100 years of European philosophy since the Great War, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 141-159.

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