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  1. 13. Mai 2024 · From these experiences emerged her theory of revolutionary mass action, which she propounded in Massenstreik, Partei und Gewerkschaften (1906; The Mass Strike, the Political Party, and the Trade Unions). Luxemburg advocated the mass strike as the single most important tool of the proletariat, Western as well as Russian, in attaining a socialist ...

  2. 8. Apr. 2021 · Not only Legien considered the mere discussion of the mass strike to be “dangerous”. He expressed a set of ideas deeply rooted in the ideology of the German social democracy, that Luxemburg’s text The Mass Strike, the Political Party and the Trade Unions came to discuss. The Mass Strike and Luxemburg’s Contributions. Rosa Luxemburg ...

  3. 16. März 2021 · A political mass strike, when seriously aiming at victory, cannot have limitations forced upon it from the outset. To not know how things may turn out is undoubtedly dangerous. The party and trade union movement may exhaust their resources; they may face repercussions by the state that threaten their ability to go on as before. Luxemburg’s ...

  4. 27. Juli 2023 · The Mass Strike, the Political Party and the Trade Unions was written in 1906 by Polish-born revolutionary Rosa Luxemburg. It brilliantly captures the fundamental lessons from the experience of mass workers' strikes and their role in the 1905 Russian Revolution. Luxemburg lived in a world in crisis - one characterised by the fast approach of the First World War - and in an era when ...

  5. 22. Dez. 2014 · 41 Rosa Luxemburg, The Mass Strike: The Political Party and the Trade Unions [1906] (New York: Harper, 1971), pp. 87–88. 42 Rosa Luxemburg, ‘The Two Methods of Trade Union Policy’ [1906] in Robert Looker (ed) Rosa Luxemburg: Selected Political Writings (London: Jonathan Cape, 1972), pp. 141–147.

  6. It gives attention to workers and their forms of protest as well as the activities of the organised labour movement and its institutions, such as trade unions and political parties. It outlines the decline of strikes in the second half of 1914, and the subsequent resurgence of protest in the following years, leading to the toppling of autocracy in 1917.

  7. 10. Okt. 2015 · Thirty years ago the German trade-unions had 50,000 members. That was obviously a number with which a mass strike on the above scale was not to be thought of. Fifteen years later the trade-unions were four times as strong, and counted 237,000 members. If, however, the present trade-union leaders had been asked at the time if the organisation of ...