Jump to content

英文维基 | 中文维基 | 日文维基 | 草榴社区

Revolutionary defeatism

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Revolutionary defeatism is a concept made most prominent by Vladimir Lenin in World War I. It is based on the Marxist idea of class struggle. Arguing that the proletariat could not win or gain when fighting a war under capitalism, Lenin declared its true enemy is the imperialist leaders who sent their lower classes into battle. Workers would gain more from their own nations' defeats, he argued, if the war could be turned into civil war and then international revolution.[1]

Initially rejected by all but the more radical at the socialist Zimmerwald Conference in 1915,[2] the concept appears to have gained support from more and more socialists, especially in Russia in 1917 after it was forcefully reaffirmed in Lenin's "April Theses" as Russia's war losses continued, even after the February Revolution as the Provisional Government kept them in the conflict. Revolutionary defeatism was also a policy of the International Communist Party under Amadeo Bordiga, which saw World War II as a reactionary war between two opposing empires, in contrast to the Communist Party of the Soviet Union and Chinese Communist Party who were then allied with Great Britain and the United States in a continuation of Dmitrov's Comitern Popular Front anti-fascist politics, which treated the war as a progressive fight for freedom and liberation from the Nazi regime. During World War I in the United Kingdom, the British socialist movement included a small minority of revolutionary defeatists such as John Maclean.[3]

Using Lenin's terminology, revolutionary defeatism can be contrasted to revolutionary defencism and to social patriotism or social chauvinism.[citation needed]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Appignanesi, Richard (1977). Lenin For Beginners. London: Writers and Readers Cooperative. p. 118. ISBN 0906386039.
  2. ^ Pipes, Richard (1991). The Russian Revolution. New York: Vintage Books. p. 382. ISBN 0679736603.
  3. ^ Thorpe, Andrew (1997), "The Surge to Second-Party Status, 1914–22", A History of the British Labour Party, London: Macmillan Education UK, p. 35, doi:10.1007/978-1-349-25305-0_3, ISBN 978-0-333-56081-5, retrieved 2022-06-16