Abbreviations xi
Editor's Note xiii
Introduction / Christian Høgsbjerg 1
World Revolution, 1917-1936
Preface 63
Introductory 65
1. Marxism 75
2. The Forerunners of the Third International 89
3. The War and the Russian Revolution 114
4. The Failure of the World Revolution and the Foundation of the
International 135
5. Lenin and Socialism 155
6. Stalin and Socialism 174
7. Stalin Kills the 1923 Revolution 192
8. The Kulak and the British General Council 222
9. Stalin Rules the Chinese Revolution 243
10. The Platform and the Five-Year Plan 276
11. Industry and the Plan 294
12. "After Hitler, Our Turn" 306
13. The Great Retreat 349
14. The Revolution Abandoned 361
15. A Fourth International the Only Hope 387
Appendix on Sidney and Beatrice Webb's Soviet Communism
401
Notes 407
Reviews of World Revolution
Selected Reviews of the Original British Edition
"The Rise and Fall of the Communist International: James's New Book
Reviewed by Fenner Brockway in New Leader 425
Reply from C. L. R. James 429
"Du Côté de Chez Trotsky," in New Statesman, by Raymond
Postgate 430
"Lunacy or Logic? Two Views of One Book," in Controversy
432
"Communist" by J. R. Campbell 432
"Trotskyist" by Harry Wicks 434
"The Retreat of Moscow," in The Plebs, by Rowland Hill 455
"World Revolution," in International Affairs, by E. H. Carr
458
"Communism in Theory and Practice," in The Advertiser
(Adelaide) 460
"The Third International," in Sydney Morning Herald 461
Selected Reviews of the Original American Edition
"No Place for Communists," in the Saturday Review, by Eugene
Lyons 463
"History of the CI," in New International by Joseph Carter [Joseph
Friedman] 465
"World Revolution," in Annals of the American Academy of Political
and Social Science, by Harry N. Howard 469
Appendixes
Appendix A. C. L. R. James, Introduction to Red Spanish Notebook:
The First Six Months of the Revolution and Civil War by Mary Low
and Juan Breá [1937] 471
Appendix B. C. L. R. James, "Report on Activities in the Provinces"
[1938] 473
Appendix C. Extracts from the Discussions between C. L. R. James
and Leon Trotsky in Coyoacán, Mexico [April 1939] 490
Index 507
C. L. R. James (1901–1989), a Trinidadian historian, political
activist, and writer, is the author of The Black Jacobins, an
influential study of the Haitian Revolution. He is also the author
of The Life of Captain Cipriani, Toussaint Louverture: The Story of
the Only Successful Slave Revolt in History, and Beyond a Boundary,
all also published by Duke University Press.
Christian Høgsbjerg is a historian and works for Leeds University
Centre for African Studies. He is the author of C. L. R. James in
Imperial Britain and the coeditor of The Black Jacobins
Reader, both also published by Duke University Press.
"World Revolution is a key part of the revolutionary Marxist
tradition and well worth reading today."
*Socialist Review*
"The timing of the re-publication of World Revolution, to mark the
centenary of the 1917 Russian Revolutions, might make the reader
think that the work is only of historical interest. It is not. It
is worth reading today because of the contemporary resonances. . .
. If you are interested in the development of Marxist philosophy,
in response to the horrors of the Stalinist counter-revolution, I
recommend that you read World Revolution."
*Marx & Philosophy Review of Books*
"This edited version of James’s account of the internal tremors of
the Bolshevik regime and its conflated relation to international
communism is valuable from the standpoint that it also includes
opinions on how the book was received and interpreted after its
publication. Therefore, one of the main strengths of this edition
is not just James’s analysis, but the reviews of World Revolution
that turn it into a complete guide that depicts his conversion and
dedication to Trotskyism. . . . A classic survey that should be
read by scholars, students, or individuals with a general interest
in the development of the Soviet Union, Marxism, Trotskyism, and
international communism between the wars."
*Revolutionary Russia*
"Vital. . . for those interested in reclaiming something from the
revolutionary traditions of the twentieth century."
*Journal of World History*
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