Chapter 1. The “Forgotten” German Revolution: A Conceptual Map (Gaard Kets and James Muldoon)
PART I. Rethinking the Revolution
Chapter 2. Women in the German Revolution (Helen L. Boak)
Chapter 3. The German Revolution and the Radical Right (Robert Heynen)
Chapter 4. Revolutionary Berlin – Fulcrum of the Twentieth Century (Donny Gluckstein)
Chapter 5. Working Class Politics in the Bremen Council Republic (Gaard Kets)
Chapter 6. Revolutionary Principles and Strategy in the November Revolution: The Case of the USPD (Nicholas Vrousalis)
PART II. Political Theorists of the German Revolution
Chapter 7. Eduard Bernstein and the Lessons of the German Revolution (Marius S. Ostrowski)
Chapter 8. Karl Kautsky and the Theory of Socialist Republicanism (Michael J. Thompson)
Chapter 9. Democracy and Dictatorship: Rosa Luxemburg’s Path to Revolution (Mayra Cotta)
Chapter 10. Richard Müller, Ernst Däumig and the “Pure” Council System (Ralf Hoffrogge)
Chapter 11. Gustav Landauer and the Revolutionary Principle of Non-Violent Non-Cooperation (Christian Bartolf and Dominique Miething)
Chapter 12. Persistent Memories: Jewish Activists and the German Revolution (Stephen Eric Bronner)
PART III. The German Revolution in Contemporary Political Theory
Chapter 13. A Theory of Council Democracy (Yohan Dubigeon)
Chapter 14. Insurgent Democracy and the German Councils (Paul Mazzocchi)
Chapter 15. Forgotten Uprisings and Silent Dialogues: Hannah Arendt and the German Revolution (Shmuel Lederman)
Chapter 16. Rosa Luxemburg on the Dialectic of Spontaneous and Party Politics (Paulina Tambakaki)
Chapter 17. The Birth of Council Communism (James Muldoon)
Gaard Kets is a historian and political theorist and lectures in political science at Radboud University, the Netherlands. His current research focuses on council communist ideology and the German Revolution.
James Muldoon is a lecturer in political science at the University of Exeter, UK. He is the editor of Council Democracy: Towards a Democratic Socialist Politics (2018) and Trumping the Mainstream: The Conquest of Mainstream Democratic Politics by the Populist Radical Right (2018, with L.E. Herman), and the author of Hegel’s Philosophy of Drives (2014). His work has appeared in Political Studies, History of Political Thought, Theory, Culture & Society, Constellations, Critical Horizons, and Parrhesia.
This book is the first collection within political theory to examine the ideas and debates of the German Revolution of 1918/19. It discusses the political theorists and actors of the revolution and uncovers an incredibly fertile body of political thought. Revolutionary events led to the proliferation of new political strategies, theoretical insights and institutional proposals. Key questions included the debate between a national assembly and a council system, the socialisation of the economy, the development of new forms of political representation and the proper role of parliaments, political parties and trade unions. This book offers novel perspectives on the history of the revolution, a thorough engagement with its main thinkers and an analysis of its relevance for contemporary political thought.
Gaard Kets is a historian and political theorist and lectures in political science at Radboud University, the Netherlands. His current research focuses on council communist ideology and the German Revolution.
James Muldoon is a lecturer in political science at the University of Exeter, UK. He is the editor of Council Democracy: Towards a Democratic Socialist Politics (2018) and Trumping the Mainstream: The Conquest of Mainstream Democratic Politics by the Populist Radical Right (2018, with L.E. Herman), and the author of Hegel’s Philosophy of Drives (2014). His work has appeared in Political Studies, History of Political Thought, Theory, Culture & Society, Constellations, Critical Horizons, and Parrhesia.