Luxemburg's corruscating politics texts on the 1905 Revolution
Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) was a Polish-born Jewish revolutionary and one of the greatest theoretical minds of the European socialist movement. An activist in Germany and Poland, the author of numerous classic works, she participated in the founding of the German Communist Party and the Spartacist insurrection in Berlin in 1919. She was assassinated in January of that year and has become a hero of socialist, communist and feminist movements around the world.
The moment has clearly come for a return to Rosa Luxemburg.
*London Review of Books*
Praise for The Letters of Rosa Luxemburg:
Combining revolutionary fire, sharp polemics, biting irony,
sparkling humour, broad historical vision, as well as profound
humanity, intimate friendship and burning love, full of poetical
images borrowed from Goethe, Mörike, Conrad Ferdinand Meyer and
other Romantics, these letters are an amazing testimony of the
charm and fascination of her personality.
*Critique*
One of the most emotionally intelligent socialists in modern
history, a radical of luminous dimension whose intellect is
informed by sensibility, and whose largeness of spirit places her
in the company of the truly impressive.
*Nation*
One cannot read the writings of Rosa Luxemburg, even at this
distance, without an acute yet mournful awareness of what Perry
Anderson once termed 'the history of possibility.'
*Atlantic*
Luxemburg's criticism of Marxism as dogma and her stress on
consciousness exerted an influence on the women's liberation
movement which emerged in the late '60s and early '70s.
*Guardian*
Rosa goes on being our source of fresh water in thirsty times.
*Eduardo Galeano*
Intrepid, incorruptible, passionate and gentle. Imagine as you read
between the lines of what she wrote, the expression of her eyes.
She loved workers and birds. She danced with a limp. Everything
about her fascinates and rings true. One of the immortals.
*John Berger*
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