Trotsky’s Brilliant Flame and Broken Reed

Social Philosophy Today 20:167-181 (2004)
  Copy   BIBTEX

Abstract

Trotsky wrote his Terrorism and Communism in 1920, as a response to Karl Kautsky’s book of the same title of the previous year. Trotsky’s aim was to win over, to the side of the Bolshevik view of socialism, the various European socialist political parties. Trotsky’s book is a rare document in the history of political thought. It is a candid and impassioned defense of the Bolshevik view that the period of transition to socialism is incompatible with both individual liberties and democratic institutions as we normally understand them, and requires instead a one-party state with unlimited powers, prepared to use instruments of terror and repression to achieve its goals. In two articles that he wrote in the late 1930s, he elaborated on this view: he sought to provide an explicitly philosophical defense of theBolsheviks’ use of terror and repression.Trotsky’s views merit examination for several reasons: first, because they illuminate the ethical underpinnings of the distinctively Bolshevik view of socialism, and second, because they force one to come to terms with the question of how intelligent, reflective, and decent individuals could have advanced policies that strike us today as ghastly. In this paper I try to piece together Trotsky’s arguments as they bear upon both the Civil War and the immediate postwar period of reconstruction. (Here I focus on his critique of democracy, his defense of terror, and his defense of compulsory labor service and the militarization of labor. This proves to be an ideal point of entry into the ethical considerations that underlie his conception of party and state.) I also examine criticisms of the policies that Trotsky was defending—criticisms that were advanced by Marxists of such disparate stripes as Kaustky, on the one hand, and Rosa Luxemburg, on the other.

Links

PhilArchive



    Upload a copy of this work     Papers currently archived: 91,752

External links

Setup an account with your affiliations in order to access resources via your University's proxy server

Through your library

Similar books and articles

Leon Trotsky’s Contribution to the Marxist Theory of History.Paul Blackledge - 2006 - Studies in East European Thought 58 (1):1 - 31.
Socialism in one country: A reassessment. [REVIEW]Erik Van Ree - 1998 - Studies in East European Thought 50 (2):77-117.
Their morals and ours.Leon Trotsky, John Dewey & George Novack (eds.) - 1966 - New York,: Pathfinder Press.
Trotsky and Spain.James G. Colbert - 1979 - Studies in East European Thought 20 (1):89-90.
Trotsky's dialectic.Ian D. Thatcher - 1991 - Studies in East European Thought 41 (2):127-144.
The blackmail of the single alternative: Bukharin, Trotsky and perestrojka.Richard B. Day - 1990 - Studies in East European Thought 40 (1-3):159-188.
Trotsky's Diary in Exile—1935.Erich Fromm - 2002 - Science and Society 66 (2):271 - 273.

Analytics

Added to PP
2011-12-02

Downloads
33 (#482,422)

6 months
6 (#510,793)

Historical graph of downloads
How can I increase my downloads?

Author's Profile

Nelson Lande
University of Massachusetts, Boston

Citations of this work

No citations found.

Add more citations

References found in this work

No references found.

Add more references