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Tuesday, May 22nd 2012


Introduction to Marxism - Change to Schedule

Under the title “Introduction to Marxism,” a new political education series began in Dublin in October. The course covers classes and class struggle, the state and democracy, philosophy, Marxist economics, imperialism and globalisation, culture, and the role of the CPI. Those wishing to attend should send an e-mail request to the CPI:cpoi@eircom.net

The presentations will make extensive use of audiovisual aids and will be followed by questions and answers and, it is hoped, a general discussion among those taking part. Some reading material will be supplied, as well as recommendations for further reading.

The venue is the New Theatre (entrance through Connolly Books), 43 East Essex Street.

See this pamphlet for more details.

Due to unforeseen circumstances our speaker for this Saturday’s session is unable to make it. We have had to postpone the class to the following Saturday 13th Nov. We are sorry if this will cause you any inconvenience and we hope you can make that date.

The session is on `The State, Democracy and Social Revolution’ by Niall Cullinane. Suggested reading material is provided in the pamphlet.

Discussion

We welcome and encourage lively discussion from the public about articles on Irish Left Review. You can leave a comment using the form at the bottom of the page. Please read through the existing comments before posting your own.

  1. Comment by: William Wall

    Nov 4th 2010 at 12:11

    May I suggest that there are some other people who post here that might be interested in this course.

  2. Comment by: Philip Pilkington

    Nov 4th 2010 at 13:11

    @ William Wall

    Yeah, like the self-professed Marxists…

  3. Comment by: Roy H W Johnston

    Nov 5th 2010 at 16:11

    I have sent an enquiry to the journal ‘International Socialism’ along the following lines, after reading their analysis of the current EU crisis:

    “…I am prompted now to write by having read the Georgiou and Hardy articles on the current European crisis. The analysis of the problem is competent but what is missing is any projection of alternative options, which would need to take into account the negative experience of monopoly-State ownership under bureaucratic centralist planning. The demise of this Stalinist system has given socialism a bad name.

    There is a serious need for the development of a credible model which vests the management of investment decisions in a democratic ownership group of working people actively concerned with their production process, whether as suppliers, production workers and management, or as consumers of the products. These differing interests would need to be weighted, in some sort of ‘constituency’ system, reflecting the position of the particular productive system in a general marketplace consisting of a variety of such democratic productive systems, the whole being regulated by a State acting as referee of the socialist economic game, without being an actual player.

    It seems to me that the starting-point for such a model is the experience of the co-operative movement. This has existed as a generator of democratic economic decisions for consumers, for producers, or for workers, but separately. I know of no situation where all 3 ‘constituencies’ owned a productive system and managed its investment process. The Yugoslav experience had worker-owned productive systems exploiting captive suppliers, and this was an aspect of their problem.

    I would be interested in exploring this area, but I feel I need a collaborator, and am open to suggestions…”

    It seems to me that something along these lines should emerge from a critical neo-Marxist analysis of the history of Soviet state enterprise; this owes its failure to the rigidities of the state ownership system, which failed to address the problem of how to manage a market. In 1988 I sat in on a seminar with Soviet economists, who joked about the need to leave in existence somewhere a capitalist market, so as to know the price of things. They had not come around to the idea that a socialist market needs to exist, subject to social management.

    I am open to suggestions for lines of research to pursue.

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Sins of the Father:

Tracing the Decisions

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