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The Retreat from Class: A New "True" Socialism
In: Labour / Le Travail, Band 19, S. 237
The Greening of Germany, 1848: Karl Grun's "True" Socialism
In: Science & society: a journal of Marxist thought and analysis, Band 35, Heft 4, S. 439-462
ISSN: 0036-8237
The New 'True' Socialism and the Old 'Correct' Marxism
In: Critical sociology, Band 16, Heft 1, S. 105-120
ISSN: 1569-1632
REVIEW ESSAY - The Retreat from Class: A New "True" Socialism
In: Studies in political economy: SPE ; a socialist review, Heft 25, S. 193-200
ISSN: 0707-8552
Religion et socialisme réel : l'analyse du sociologue / Religion and True Socialism: the Sociologist's Analysis
In: Archives de sciences sociales des religions: ASSR, Band 65, Heft 1, S. 25-45
ISSN: 1777-5825
"The spirit of true socialism": das Fabian Colonial Bureau und die koloniale Reformpolitik im subsaharischen Afrika
In: Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaft: ZfG, Band 58, Heft 12, S. 994-1013
ISSN: 0044-2828
Der Aufruf zu weltweitem Sozialismus war Teil der Debatten zur Reformierung kolonialer Herrschaft und zur Dekolonisation in Großbritannien nach dem Zweiten Weltkrieg. Er stammt aus der Feder eines sozialistischen Intellektuellenzirkels, des Fabian Colonial Bureau (FCB), das von Mitgliedern der Fabian Society gegründet worden war. Es befasste sich in den 1940er- und 1950er-Jahren intensiv mit Reformkonzepten für die britischen Kolonien. In dieser Zeit war die britische Kolonialherrschaft international und innenpolitisch zunehmend in die Kritik geraten. In vielen Teilen des britischen Imperiums kam es zu Streiks und Unruhen. Der vorliegende Beitrag zu den Reformen und das Ende kolonialer Politik ermöglicht auf verschiedenen Ebenen Einblicke in die Prozesse der Dekolonisation. Zum einen wird für die britische Kolonialpolitik der Kriegs- und unmittelbaren Nachkriegszeit einen parteiübergreifenden Konsens zwischen den Tories und der Labour Party konstatiert. Bezieht man aber für diese Frage intellektuelle Debatten mit ein, die Einfluss auf die Kolonialpolitik der Labour Party hatten, ergibt sich ein anderes Bild. Ein Blick auf die Diskussionen der Fabier zeigt, welch starke Rolle hier politische und ideologische Grundsätze spielten, die in der politischen Praxis der Sozialisten in Großbritannien selbst entstanden sind, und wie sich diese wandelten, als sie in die Kolonien getragen wurden. (ICA2)
From "False" Neutrality to "True" Socialism: US "Sweden-bashing" during the Later Palme Years, 1973–1986
Throughout the Cold War years, images of the USA, the American Way, and notions of Americanization played a significant role globally. Partly due to the dominance of this US-centered notion of Western democracy, admittedly marginal images of Sweden and the Swedish Model were held out as a palatable alternative to US capitalism. However, this alleged "exemplarity" of Sweden also made it the subject of a genre of "Sweden-bashing" in global public opinion.In this genre, US media actors played a key role for the shift from the Utopian image of Sweden in the 1960s to the more Dystopian visions of a welfare state in decline circulating from the 1980s and onwards. While US criticism of Swedish anti-war protests is well-known, the time period from 1973 to the assassination of Palme in 1986 has not been studied. This article therefore follows the active but largely unofficial American Sweden-criticism and the official Swedish tracking of this publicity, its reception in Sweden, and various Swedish attempts at affecting the image of Sweden in the USA.In particular, the article tracks a shift in US Sweden-bashing from targeting alleged "false" neutrality of Swedish foreign policy to attacking the "true" socialism supposedly detectable in Swedish domestic policies and development aid. Central themes of Swedish "People's Home" criticism in the 1990s first emerged in US media and then spread in global public opinion, well before they entered Swedish debate, highlighting how transatlantic exchange may belatedly and indirectly impact upon national identity, collective memory, and historical consciousness.
BASE
From "False" Neutrality to "True" Socialism: US "Sweden-bashing" during the Later Palme Years, 1973–1986
Throughout the Cold War years, images of the USA, the American Way, and notions of Americanization played a significant role globally. Partly due to the dominance of this US-centered notion of Western democracy, admittedly marginal images of Sweden and the Swedish Model were held out as a palatable alternative to US capitalism. However, this alleged "exemplarity" of Sweden also made it the subject of a genre of "Sweden-bashing" in global public opinion. In this genre, US media actors played a key role for the shift from the Utopian image of Sweden in the 1960s to the more Dystopian visions of a welfare state in decline circulating from the 1980s and onwards. While US criticism of Swedish anti-war protests is well-known, the time period from 1973 to the assassination of Palme in 1986 has not been studied. This article therefore follows the active but largely unofficial American Sweden-criticism and the official Swedish tracking of this publicity, its reception in Sweden, and various Swedish attempts at affecting the image of Sweden in the USA. In particular, the article tracks a shift in US Sweden-bashing from targeting alleged "false" neutrality of Swedish foreign policy to attacking the "true" socialism supposedly detectable in Swedish domestic policies and development aid. Central themes of Swedish "People's Home" criticism in the 1990s first emerged in US media and then spread in global public opinion, well before they entered Swedish debate, highlighting how transatlantic exchange may belatedly and indirectly impact upon national identity, collective memory, and historical consciousness.
BASE
REVIEW ARTICLE - Classes (see abstract of review in SA 37:2)
In: Thesis eleven: critical theory and historical sociology, Heft 18-19, S. 166-178
ISSN: 0725-5136
Book Review: Ellen Meiksins Wood, The Retreat from Class: A New True Socialism (Verso, 1986), pp. 202. $NZ35
In: Political science, Band 41, Heft 1, S. 85-87
ISSN: 2041-0611
The new Fabians [comment on book entitled, New Fabian essays, by R. H. S. Crossman, ed.: contends that the book does not represent true socialism]
In: The Labour monthly: LM ; a magazine of left unity, Band 34, S. 337-346
ISSN: 0023-6985
Evaluating National Socialism as a "True" Fascist Movement
In: Advances in historical studies, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 11-16
ISSN: 2327-0446
Social-democratic "socialism" in Sweden: is it true that Sweden is a country of socialism?
In: World Marxist review: problems of peace and socialism, Band 2, S. 51-58
ISSN: 0043-8642
Macmillan and Home: ‘pink socialism’ and ‘true-blue’ Conservatism, 1957–64
In: The Conservative Party and the extreme right 1945–75, S. 69-121