Biblioteca / 2000-2009
Michael Newman. Ralph Miliband and the Politics of the New Left.
Londres: Merlin Press; Nueva York: Monthly Review Press, 2002.
385 páginas.
Contents
Foreword
Introduction
I – Socialism and Identity
1 – Growing up in Brussels and London, 1924-41
2 – Cambridge and LSE, 1941-43
3 – The Navy, 1943-46
II – Apprenticeship (1946-56)
1 – Reuniting the Family
2 – Academic Life
3 – On the Labour Left
4 – Writings
5 – The Legacy of Laski
III – The New Left and Parliamentary Socialism (1956-62)
1 – New Relationships
2 – Parliamentary Socialism
3 – The Politics behind Parliamentary Socialism
4 – A New Left Theorist?
IV – The Sixties (1962-69)
1 – The Break with the Labour Party
2 – From New Left Review to The Socialist Register
3 – The Crises of the 1960s
V – Free Speech and Academic Freedom
VI – The State in Capitalist Society and the Debate with Poulantzas
1 – The State in Capitalist Society
2 – The Miliband-Poulantzas Debate
VII – Marxism and Politics (1970-77)
1 – Political Thought
2 – Political Practice: The Centres for Marxist Education and the Idea of a New Socialist Party
VIII – An Uphill Struggle (1977-91)
1 – A Year in Boston and its Consequences
2 – Politics and the United States
3 – Analyzing “Thatcherism’
4 – ‘Bennism’ and the Socialist Society
5 – Confronting the ‘New Revisionism’
6 – Soviet-type Regimes and the Gorbachev Reforms
7 – The Independent Left Corresponding Society and the Chesterfield Conferences
8 – The Collapse of Communism
IX – In Pursuit of Socialism
Conclusion: Ralph Miliband Today
Notes on Sources & Bibliography