Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Socialism
- Human Nature
- optimistic view
- believe individuals are
co-operative, generous and
altruistic
- naturally seek solidarity, fraternityand
companionship
- see human nature as
malleable rather than
fixed at birth
- Revisionist Socialism
- seek to revise the fundamentalist view that
socialism is incompatible with capitalism
- believe that socialism and
capitalism can co-exist
- Variations
- social democracy
- The 3rd Way
- classic revisionism
- State
- socialists believe that
without a strong state it
will be impossible to bring
about a fairer and more
equal society
- Reject the idea of a
monarchal state, a
theocratic state or an
aristocratic state
- between socialists there are
still significant differences
about the structure of ideal
state, its extent and how it
emerges
- helps to explain why
socialism has such a
large number of
variants and
subdivisions
- society
- Humans are dependant on
the society in which they
find themselves
- individuals are the
product of the
society into which
they were born
- See society as
shaping the
individuals
inside it
- If society can be improved in
the prospect of its individuals
- Economy
- fundamentalist socialism
believes that socialism is
fundamentally at oddswith
private ownershipand
capitalism
- Revisionist socialism believes
that socialism can be achieved
alongside private property and
can co-exist with capitalism
- Fundamentalist Socialism
- Karl Marx
- main socialist thinker and writer of the 19thC
- wrote the 'Communist Maifesto' - main short
text of revolutionary socialism
- Engels supported Marx financially
- View of History
- class conflicts is the most important of all
happenings in history
- Human society had evolved through
stages, these could not have been
changed and were inevitable
- Historical (dialectic) Materialism
- Feudal Society
- Capitalism
- Socialism
- Communism
- state: no government
needed
- society: no classes,
everyone is equal
- At first workers control the
state to resist counter
revolution, known as the
'dictatorship of the proletariat'.
As threat diminishes, state
becomes less + less powerful
- Proletariat Revolution
- growth of industry
enlarges proles.
Capitalism produces great
wealth which is unfairly
allocated. workers
eventually revolt
- state: parliamentary
democracy defending
'liberal principles'
- Society: dom - m/c
maj - proletariat
- Bourgeois Revolution
- growth of commerce + trade
means an increasingly wealthy
m/c who seek more political
power to go with economic power
- political: monarchy
- Society: dom -
aristocracy
maj - peasants
- Classic Revisionism
- Different in the belief that the struggle for
socialism could co-exist with an economy based on
private property
- Saw conditions of the working class
steadily improving under capitalism
- Shared the belief of fabien
Society in the gradual
parliamentary road of
socialism
- Argued that if overseen by socialist
governmants, capitalist economies
could provide an even greater
improvement in workers conditions
- Social Democracy
- Regarded as the most important and relevant
form of revisionist socialism - far removed from
the politics if Marx & Lenin
- Anthony Crosland
- 'The Future of Socialism' is seen as
the key work of post war social
democracy
- Reformed capitalism was no
longer vulnerable to 'peaks and
troughs' and could be relied
upon to finance a richer, fairer
more classless society
- Capitalism would finance the expansion of
public spending and the welfare state towards
the ultimate socialist goal of greater equality
- Evolutionary Socialism
(democratic socialism)
- Leninism
- believed that the process of dialectic
change could be sped up
- Democratic
Centralism -
revolutionary elite
would plan, organise
and undertake
revolution
- Dictator of the Proletariat
- orthodox
communism
- Democratic Socialism was
the most influential forms of
fundamentalist socialism in
the UK
- Rosa Luxemburg
- Lenins view of speeding up
the dialectic process lacked
relevance in already
industrial societies
- Critical of Lenin's
idea of democratic
centralism and the
role of revolutionary
elite
- Early Democratic Socialism
- vital to the development
of the Labour Party
- Associated with Fabian
Society and bourgeois
intellectuals
- need to secure 'Common
ownership of the means of
production'
- The Inevitability of Gradualism
- Democratic socialist parties would campaign peacefully
and win attention and trust of voters
- Working class voters would gradually and inevitable
realise they had no vested interest in capitalism
- Election of socialist governments who would oversee the gradual
replacement of private ownership with state ownership
- Voters would recognise the progress and re-e;ect socialist government
who would gradually and inevitably produce a socialist society
- Later Democratic Socialism
- Restoration of
parliamentary
sovereignty through
withdrawal from
EEC
- Strong resistance to pro-capitalist
interest by mobilising support
within trade unions
- post WW2
Labour
government
- The 3rd Way (Neo-Revisionism)
- A new form of revisionist
socialism seemed essential
in the 21stC
- Emerged in the UK as a response to:
- dissappearance of fundamentalist socialism
- mixed economy had failed in
the UK with with extensive
privatisation in the 1980s
- Keynesian economic
redundant with globalisation
of capitalism
- Associated with 'New Labour' govt of
Blair and Brown
- Giddens
- Desire to 'triangulate' social democracy's wish for more equality within
capitalist economy which was less keynesian and more neo-liberal
- Main author of 3rd
Way socialism