Alexander Buchman’s camera captured Trotsky feeding his rabbits, part of his daily routine and, as mounting concern for his security limited his excursions away from the house, his principal form of exercise. In January 1940, the burgeoning bunny population was transferred to new threedecker cages that Trotsky had designed. Buchman captured the moment when Trotsky gently delivered the docile creatures to their new quarters. When American socialist Max Eastman visited the house the following month, it seemed to him “so amusingly strange to be introduced to a flock of rabbits by the War Commissar and Commander-in-Chief of the Red Army.” By then, the rabbits numbered well over a hundred.

Alexander Buchman’s camera captured Trotsky feeding his rabbits, part of his daily routine and, as mounting concern for his security limited his excursions away from the house, his principal form of exercise. In January 1940, the burgeoning bunny population was transferred to new threedecker cages that Trotsky had designed. Buchman captured the moment when Trotsky gently delivered the docile creatures to their new quarters. When American socialist Max Eastman visited the house the following month, it seemed to him “so amusingly strange to be introduced to a flock of rabbits by the War Commissar and Commander-in-Chief of the Red Army.” By then, the rabbits numbered well over a hundred.

Posted at 8:41 PM - June 16, 2012. source.
fyeah-history:

Antonio GramsciAntonio Gramsci (January 22, 1891 – April 27, 1937) was an Italian writer, politician, political philosopher, and linguist. He was a founding member and onetime leader of the Communist Party of Italy and was imprisoned by Benito Mussolini’s Fascist regime. Gramsci was one of the most important Marxist thinkers in the 20th century, and his writings are heavily concerned with the analysis of culture and political leadership; he is notable as a highly original thinker within modern European thought. He is renowned for his concept of cultural hegemony as a means of maintaining the state in a capitalist society.

fyeah-history:

Antonio Gramsci
Antonio Gramsci (January 22, 1891 – April 27, 1937) was an Italian writer, politician, political philosopher, and linguist. He was a founding member and onetime leader of the Communist Party of Italy and was imprisoned by Benito Mussolini’s Fascist regime. Gramsci was one of the most important Marxist thinkers in the 20th century, and his writings are heavily concerned with the analysis of culture and political leadership; he is notable as a highly original thinker within modern European thought. He is renowned for his concept of cultural hegemony as a means of maintaining the state in a capitalist society.

Posted at 4:12 AM - March 31, 2012. source.
"The materialist doctrine that men are the product of circumstances and education, that changed men are therefore the products of other circumstances and of a different education, forgets that circumstances are in fact changed by men and that the educator must himself be educated."
—Karl Marx: Theses on Feurbach (via a-higher-level)
Posted at 10:41 PM - March 26, 2012. source.
nightscale:

Bolshevik Red Terror

nightscale:

Bolshevik Red Terror

Posted at 2:15 PM - March 04, 2012. source.

a-higher-level:

“With the Bourgeoisie, also, class consciousness stands in opposition to class interest. But here the antagonism is not contradictory but dialectical.

The distinction between the two modes of contradiction may be briefly described in this way: in the case of the other classes, a class consciousness is prevented from emerging by their position within the process of production and the interests this generates. In the case of the bourgeoisie, however, these factors combine to produce a class consciousness but one which is cursed by its very nature with the tragic fate of developing an insoluble contradiction at the very zenith of its powers. As a result of this contradiction it must annihilate itself.

The tragedy of the bourgeoisie is reflected historically in the fact that even before it had defeated it predecessor, feudalism, its new enemy, the proletariat, had appeared on the scene. Politically, it became evident when at the moment of victory, the ‘freedom’ in whose name the bourgeoisie had joined battle with feudalism, was transformed into a new repressiveness. Sociologically, the bourgeoisie did everything in its power to eradicate the fact of class conflict from the consciousness of society, even though class conflict had only emerged in its purity and became established as a historical fact with the advent of capitalism. Ideologically, we see the same contradiciton in the fact that the bourgeoisie endowed the individual with an unprecedented importance, but at the same time that same individuality was annihilated by the economic conditions to which it was subjected, by the reification created by commodity productions.”

- George Lukács History and Class Consciousness: Studies in Marxist Dialectics : Class Consciousness 

[ Italics directly transcribed from original text; Bold added for emphasis]

Posted at 2:43 PM - March 01, 2012. source.
"Capitalist production, therefore, develops technology, and the combining together of various processes into a social whole, only by sapping the original sources of all wealth - the soil and the labourer."
—Karl Marx (via marixistromanticist)

(Source: eatthebourgouisie)

Posted at 12:34 AM - February 18, 2012. source.

sonofapritch:

Jameson is a butthead 

I’ve not read any of his stuff, excluding that quote which seems a little hyperbolic to say the least, so I am curious in which ways he butts heads?

(Source: nicoie)

Posted at 11:44 PM - December 21, 2011. source.
"But it seems paradoxical to celebrate the death of Marxism in the same breath with which you greet the ultimate triumph of capitalism. For Marxism is the very science of capitalism; its epistemological vocation lies in its unmatched capacity to describe capitalism’s historical originality, whose fundamental structural contradictions endow it with its political and its prophetic vocation, which can scarcely be distinguished from the analytic ones. This is why, whatever its other vicissitudes, a postmodern capitalism necessarily calls a postmodern Marxism into existence over against itself. (409)"

Fedric Jameson, The Valences of the Dialectic

This is the great irony of the post-modern age. We live in a world where capitalism is increasingly more total than ever before; it is a system that has reified concepts and the human psyche like never before; it is a system that has subordinated use-values for exchange-values to the nth degree; yet, the charge is that Marxism is dead. I think that hubris is over, people are rediscovering Marxism as a valid and eminently correct theoretical framework to understand capitalism in its increasing radical phase.

(via nicoie)

I always get curious over these claims about Marxism dying that almost invariably come from people with a capitalist/individualist strand to their own method.  They seem to conflate Marxism as a method of criticism as being Marxism as a social movement, in at once failing to understand that they are not always one and the same and further to that failing to notice that in these times of crisis both are back on the rise.

Posted at 11:35 PM - December 21, 2011. source.