ABSTRACT

This classic work on the psychology of socialism carries for this edition a slightly refurbished title. By calling it The Psychology of Marxian Socialism, the work is sharply distinguished from an earlier work of the same title (written at a much earlier time) by Gustave LeBon. This book was written in the post-Bolshevik revolutionary era, at the height of the Weimar democracy in Germany; LeBon’s represents a fin de siècle effort, reflecting earlier concerns in socialist theory. De Man’s work derives its strength from a close and hard look at how socialism operated in one country. It is probably one of the greatest such efforts in the post-World War I period.

part One|150 pages

Causes

chapter Chapter One|19 pages

The Theory Of Motives As The Central Problem Of Socialism

chapter Chapter Two|20 pages

The Social Inferiority Complex of the Working Class

chapter Chapter Three|39 pages

Exploitation, Oppression, and Joyless Labour

chapter Chapter Four|28 pages

Equality and Democracy

chapter Chapter Five|42 pages

Solidarity, Eschatology, Religious Symbolism

part Two|71 pages

Aims

chapter Chapter Six|26 pages

Socialist Conception of the Future Society

chapter Chapter Seven|24 pages

Intellectuals and the State

chapter Chapter Eight|19 pages

The Socialism Of Intellectuals

part Three|88 pages

The Movement

chapter Chapter Nine|29 pages

Proletarian Culture or Embourgeoisement?

chapter Chapter Ten|32 pages

Socialism in Time: From Revolutionism to Reformism

chapter Chapter Eleven|25 pages

Socialism in Space: From Internationalism to Social-Patriotism

part Four|183 pages

Doctrine

chapter Chapter Twelve|28 pages

Marxist Rationalism

chapter Chapter Thirteen|28 pages

Marxist Economic Hedonism

chapter Chapter Fourteen|26 pages

Marxist Determinism

chapter Chapter Fifteen|30 pages

The Marxism Of The Elect And The Marxism Of The Crowd

chapter Chapter Sixteen|27 pages

Theory and Practice

chapter Chapter Seventeen|42 pages

Credo