Joseph Dietzgen and the Socialist Politics of the Working-class

2021 ◽  
Vol 35 (1) ◽  
pp. 116-141
Author(s):  
Joe Pateman
2001 ◽  
Vol 74 (184) ◽  
pp. 193-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew August

Abstract In their communities, and in interactions with authorities and profit-seekers, residents of late Victorian London working-class districts struggled forcefully over the distribution of power, resources and prestige. They battled one another, in households and neighbourhoods, enforcing hierarchies and unequal access to resources. Philanthropists met hostile, manipulative and assertive poor people. Working-class Londoners resisted unwelcome state incursions and exploited government resources toward their own ends. They also fought employers and landlords over resources and power. Though their involvement in unions and socialist politics was uneven, these working-class Londoners participated actively in a pervasive politics of everyday life.


1995 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 243-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Louise A. Tilly

Andrea Costa, a contemporary observer and sometime participant in Italian socialist politics, spoke in 1886 in defense of the Lombardy-based Partito operaio, whose leaders had been arrested and its newspaper muzzled. He offered a classic Marxist interpretation of the party's emergence as a “natural product of… our economic and social conditions … the concentration of the means of production in few hands, distancing the worker more and more from his tools … and likewise a product of our political conditions … electoral reform, by means of which the working class … can affirm itself as a class apart.” Further, this party had been founded in Milan, “where modern industry has penetrated more than elsewhere,” and closely following the expansion of the suffrage in 1881 (Italy 1886: 419).


1971 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maxwell Schleifer ◽  
Joseph Katz ◽  
Asa Knowles ◽  
Nevitt Sanford
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