Marxist bibliography


is a method of socioeconomic analysis that analyzes class relations and societal conflict, that uses a materialist interpretation of historical development, and a dialectical view of social transformation. Marxist methodology uses economic and sociopolitical inquiry and applies that to the critique and analysis of the development of capitalism and the role of class struggle in systemic economic change.

Marxist bibliography

YearAuthorBibliography
1908 - 1973
1918 - 1990
1885 - 1977
1868 - 1916
1852 - 1914
1882 - 1949
1820 - 1895

1903 - 1997Lev Gatovsky
Main page: Lev Gatovsky
See also: Economy of the Soviet Union, Planned economy, Five-year plans
1928 - 1967

1854 - 1938

Kautsky was considered the premier Marxist theoretician after the death of Marx and Engels and the 'pope of Marxism'. His intellectual work was instrumental in the Second International and Orthodox Marxism.
1912 - 1994
Kim Il Sung

1941 - 2011
Kim Jong Il

1984 -
Kim Jong Un

1870 - 1924

Lenin was a prolific political theoretician and philosopher who wrote about the practical aspects of carrying out a proletarian revolution; he wrote pamphlets, articles, and books, without a stenographer or secretary, until prevented by illness. He simultaneously corresponded with comrades, allies, and friends, in Russia and world-wide. His Collected Works comprise 54 volumes, each of about 650 pages, translated into English in 45 volumes by Progress Publishers, Moscow 1960–70.
1885 - 1971

1871 - 1919

1893 - 1979

1898 - 1979

1818 - 1883

1878 - 1953
1879 - 1940

1857 - 1933