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Pathfinder Press, New York 1970. 281 pp. Paperback. Good condition.
Verlag: SCHWARZ, 1957
Anbieter: Laboratorio del libro, Condove, Italien
325 pp., legatura ed., sovracoperta, buonissime condizioni.
Verlag: Terra-Knizhnyy klub, 1997
ISBN 10: 5300013609ISBN 13: 9785300013608
Anbieter: 2nd Life Books, Burlington, NJ, USA
Buch
Zustand: acceptable. A readable copy. All pages are intact, and the cover is intact. Dust jacket may be missing. Pages can include considerable highlighting markings writing but cannot obscure the text. May be an Ex-lib. copy and have standard library stamps and or stickers. May NOT include discs, or access code or other supplemental material. We ship Monday-Saturday and respond to inquiries within 24 hours.
Verlag: Moskwa: Gosudarstwennoje Isdatelstwo izobrazitelnowo Iskusstwa 1924, 1924
2. umgearbeitete und ergänzte Auflage, OKart., 63 Seiten, 12°, Einband leicht berieben und bestoßen, sonst in sehr gutem Zustand. Besonders selten, sehr guter Zustand. frisch, sehr guter Zustand. Book Language/s: Russian.
Verlag: Zheneva [Geneva, Geneve]: Izdaniye Rossiyskoy Sotsialdemokraticheskoy Rabochey Partii, 1904
Anbieter: Dan Wyman Books, LLC, Brooklyn, NY, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardback. 1st edition. Period boards, 12mo (small), xi, 107 pages; 18 cm. In Russian with some French and German on title page: "Unsere politische Aufgaben. N. Trotzky." Title here translates as "Our Political Objectives: (Tactical and Organizational Issues)." Later issued in English as "Our Political Tasks." With the stamp of the Central Committee of the "Rossiiskaia sotsial-demokraticheskaia rabochaia partiia" (The Russian Social Democratic Workers Party], which Trotsky and Lenin belonged to and which is, to a large extent, the subject of the work, which is directly tied to the split with Lenin. "Our Political Tasks is Trotsky's response to the 1903 split in Russian Social Democracy and a spirited reply to Lenin's â What Is To Be Done?' and â One Step Forwards, Two Steps Back.' A passionate, insightful attack on Lenin's theory of party organisation and an outline of Trotsky's own views on party structure, this controversial work was later disowned by Trotsky after he joined the Bolsheviks. Though it is far from Trotsky's best work on a literary level (the young Trotsky tends to be repetitive, excessively sarcastic, overly verbose and generally in need of a good editor), the work is, nevertheless, a remarkable insight into the young Trotsky's thinking and a vibrant expression of his commitment to revolution. It is, at times, hauntingly prophetic in its predictions of where the Leninist conception of democratic centralism may lead. For example, in the chapter â Down With Substitutionism' in Part II of the book, Trotsky writes in what could be a description of Stalinism: â In the internal politics of the Party these methods lead, as we shall see below, to the Party organisation >>substituting.