Die nächste Revolution

Libertärer Kommunalismus und die Zukunft der Linken

Paperback, 221 pages

German language

Published July 1, 2015 by Unrast Verlag.

ISBN:
978-3-89771-594-3
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OCLC Number:
1041280850

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3 stars (7 reviews)

Mehr als 40 Jahre lang entwickelte Murray Bookchin seine Ideen über Kommunalismus, libertäre Ökologie und direkte Demokratie und brachte sie in die Politik der Neuen Linken ein. Seine Schri?ften beeinflussten zahlreiche politische DenkerInnen und Soziale Bewegungen – von der radikalen Ökologiebewegung bis zur Antiglobalisierungsbewegung. Nicht zuletzt bezieht sich aktuell die kurdische Befreiungsbewegung in der Türkei und in Syrien auf die Weiterentwicklung von Bookchins Idee des Libertären Kommunalismus zur Praxis des Demokratischen Konföderalismus.

Mit einem Vorwort der Bestsellerautorin Ursula K. Le Guin eingeleitet, versammelt „Die nächste Revolution“ erstmals Bookchins Essays über Freiheit und direkte Demokratie, um eine gewichtige politische Vision zu entwickeln, die vom Protest zur praktischen Transformation des Kapitalismus führen kann.

(Quelle: Unrast Verlag)

2 editions

Practical next steps for civilization

5 stars

(texto completo, em português → sol2070.in/2024/09/crise-ecologica-reconstru%C3%A7%C3%A3o-sociedade-murray-bookchin-the-next-revolution/ )

"The Next Revolution" (2015) brings together articles from the 1990s and 2000s by the influential revolutionary author Murray Bookchin. As the subtitle says, it's about direct democracy and popular assemblies.

After abandoning socialism, the american Bookchin became one of the most influential anarchist authors in the 60s. In the 1990s, he also distanced himself from anarchism - not because he disagreed with its principles, but because he felt trapped by others' definitions of the movement and the resulting accusations.

As this is a book that brings together articles from his final phase, the ideas have the flavour of a synthesis of a life dedicated to revolutionary thought, which he condensed into what he called ‘social ecology’. His revolutionary theory is ‘municipalism’, with an undeniably anarchist flavour.

Legendary writer Ursula K. Le Guin writes in the book's introduction:

‘Murray Bookchin spent a lifetime opposing …

Review of 'The next revolution' on 'GoodReads'

3 stars

Short and easy to skim. I don't have the theoretical background to get too deep into his arguments, but the general gist seems to be:
Marxism & anarchism were useful frameworks for their time but now times have changed
In particular, we see that capitalism was in its youth at the turn of the 20th century, not in its old age, and also that workers are whole entire people and not just revolutionaries
* Let's make city councils stronger, break down big cities into "human-scale municipalities," and move towards a society of loosely interdependent municipalities. This will be a moral society.

Definitely skeptical of that last point, especially since I just read a bunch of stuff about how planning complicated things doesn't really work, and the fraught-ness of top-down restructuring of society.

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