The permanent revolution and results and prospects / [by] Leon Trotsky ; cover design Nelson Blackstock.

By: Trotsky, Leon, 1879-1940 [author.]Contributor(s): Blackstock, Nelson [cover designer.]Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: Russian New York : Merit Publishers, 1972©1969 Edition: Third printing: October 1972Description: 281 pages : facsimiles, portraits ; 21 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeUniform titles: Permanentnai͡a revoli͡ut͡sii͡a. English Contained works: Trotsky, Leon, 1879-1940. Perspektivy russkoĭ revoli͡ut͡sii. English. 1969Subject(s): Revolutions | Communism | Socialism | Soviet Union -- Politics and government | Permanent revolution theory | Communism -- Soviet UnionLOC classification: HX317 .T713 1972Summary: Nonfiction. Political Science. Social Theory & History. Translated from the Russian by John G. Wright, Brian Pearce, et al. Introduction by Luma Nichol. The theory of permanent revolution is one of the defining principles of Trotskyism. Yet Trotsky's essential works on the question have long been unavailable in book form to U.S. readers. Now Red Letter Press has issued an attractive and corrected new edition that will be appreciated by both newcomers to socialist ideas and old hands. In the two major works presented in this book, "Results and Prospects" and "The Permanent Revolution," Trotsky showed that developing countries must achieve workers' rule in order to defeat tyranny and foreign domination. He explained that if socialism is to succeed it must expand beyond national borders and transform every aspect of political, economic and human relations.
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Genel Koleksiyon HX 317 .T713 1972 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 0004647

Translation of Permanentnai͡a revoli͡ut͡sii͡a.

Nonfiction. Political Science. Social Theory & History. Translated from the Russian by John G. Wright, Brian Pearce, et al. Introduction by Luma Nichol. The theory of permanent revolution is one of the defining principles of Trotskyism. Yet Trotsky's essential works on the question have long been unavailable in book form to U.S. readers. Now Red Letter Press has issued an attractive and corrected new edition that will be appreciated by both newcomers to socialist ideas and old hands. In the two major works presented in this book, "Results and Prospects" and "The Permanent Revolution," Trotsky showed that developing countries must achieve workers' rule in order to defeat tyranny and foreign domination. He explained that if socialism is to succeed it must expand beyond national borders and transform every aspect of political, economic and human relations.