ABSTRACT

In this book, first published in 1992, the author examines the polemic fought by German Social-Democratic Party leaders and intellectuals Karl Kautsky and Eduard Bernstein against what they perceived to be misunderstandings of Marxism propagated by members of the Social-Democratic Federation (SDF) in England and by the socialist leader Wilhelm Liebknecht in Germany. The debate raised basic questions of socialist theory, including whether the program of Marx and Engels called for scholarly study, parliamentary democracy, and gradual social evolution, or for Utopian speculation, economic collapse, and violent rebellion.

chapter 1|64 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|48 pages

The Agrarian Question (1895)

chapter 3|50 pages

British Politics (Autumn 1895)

chapter 4|72 pages

The Political Crises of 1896

chapter 6|46 pages

The Turning Point (Winter 1897)

chapter 7|40 pages

Crete and Prussia (Spring and Summer 1897)

chapter 8|30 pages

The Last Months Before the Controversy

chapter 9|10 pages

Conclusion