Imperialism: The Highest Stage of Capitalism

· Ravenio Books
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The pamphlet here presented to the reader was written in the spring of 1916, in Zurich. In the conditions in which I was obliged to work there I naturally suffered somewhat from a shortage of French and English literature and from a serious dearth of Russian literature. However, I made use of the principal English work on imperialism, the book by J. A. Hobson, with all the care that, in my opinion, work deserves.

This pamphlet was written with an eye to the tsarist censorship. Hence, I was not only forced to confine myself strictly to an exclusively theoretical, specifically economic analysis of facts, but to formulate the few necessary observations on politics with extreme caution, by hints, in an allegorical language—in that accursed Aesopian language—to which tsarism compelled all revolutionaries to have recourse whenever they took up the pen to write a “legal” work.

It is painful, in these days of liberty, to re-read the passages of the pamphlet which have been distorted, cramped, compressed in an iron vice on account of the censor. That the period of imperialism is the eve of the socialist revolution; that social-chauvinism (socialism in words, chauvinism in deeds) is the utter betrayal of socialism, complete desertion to the side of the bourgeoisie; that this split in the working-class movement is bound up with the objective conditions of imperialism, etc.—on these matters I had to speak in a “slavish” tongue, and I must refer the reader who is interested in the subject to the articles I wrote abroad in 1914-17, a new edition of which is soon to appear. In order to show the reader, in a guise acceptable to the censors, how shamelessly untruthful the capitalists and the social-chauvinists who have deserted to their side (and whom Kautsky opposes so inconsistently) are on the question of annexations; in order to show how shamelessly they screen the annexations of their capitalists, I was forced to quote as an example—Japan! The careful reader will easily substitute Russia for Japan, and Finland, Poland, Courland, the Ukraine, Khiva, Bokhara, Estonia or other regions peopled by non-Great Russians, for Korea.

I trust that this pamphlet will help the reader to understand the fundamental economic question, that of the economic essence of imperialism, for unless this is studied, it will be impossible to understand and appraise modern war and modern politics.

Ratings and reviews

5.0
2 reviews
Alexes Green
November 22, 2019
This book, and Lenin himself succeeded in writing one of the best anthologies and critiques of capital, and the transition from feudalism to capitalism we have available. Further, his predicting of the consequences of the spread of capital is with almost spooky accuracy. Those that say he was ahead of the times fall prey to the myths of our ancestors as brutish and dumb. They just didn't get to write history. it doesn't serve the power of capital for us to know of the working class struggles of the past. In England and Ireland from late 1500's through the 1700's, wage labor (what we call now a "job") was considered a form of slavery (the peasantry called it wage-slavery) and fought against it with every breadth they exhaled, and with every seed planted within the commons, and every drop of blood sacrificed to preserve the commons. American chattel slavery emerged after this time, and is a direct descendant of the European witch hunts that ushered in the culture of Capitalism.
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