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Full Description
Rosa Luxemburg is unquestionably the most important historical European woman Marxist theorist. Significantly, for the purpose of creolizing the canon, she considered her continent and the globe from an Eastern Europe that was in constant flux and turmoil. From this relatively peripheral location, she was far less parochial than many of her more centrally located interlocutors and peers. Indeed, Luxemburg's work touched on all the burning issues of her time and ours, from analysis of concrete revolutionary struggles, such as those in Poland and Russia, to showing through her analysis of primitive accumulation that anti-capitalist and anti-colonial struggles had to be intertwined, to considerations of state sovereignty, democracy, feminism, and racism. She thereby offered reflections that can usefully be taken up and reworked by writers facing continuous and new challenges to undo relations of exploitation through radical economic and social transformation Luxemburg touches on all aspects of what constitutes revolution in her work; the authors of this volume show us that, by creolizing Luxemburg, we can open up new paths of understanding the complexities of revolution.
Contents
"I Have a Thousand More Things I Want to Say to You": An Introduction to Creolizing Rosa Luxemburg, Drucilla Cornell and Jane Anna Gordon
Debating Nationalism
A Troubled Legacy: Rosa Luxemburg and the Non-Western World, Peter Hudis
The Contemporary Transnational Relevance of Rosa Luxemburg's Socialist Critique of National Self-Determination, Drucilla Cornell
Against a Single History, for a Revaluation of Power: Luxemburg, James, and a Decolonial Critique of Political Economy, Alyssa Adamson
Revolutionary Subjects
Walter Rodney's Russian Revolution and the Curious Case of Rosa Luxemburg,
Robin D. G. Kelley
A Political Economy of the Damned: Reading Rosa Luxemburg on Slavery through a Creolizing Lens, Jane Anna Gordon
One Hundred Years of Rosa Luxemburg's Marxism: Imperialism and Lessons in Democracy for the Contemporary South African Left, Gunnett Kaaf
Rosa Luxemburg, Nature, and Imprisonment, Maria Theresia Starzmann
The Mass Strike, Past and Present
"The Living Pulsebeat of the Revolution": Read



