- Georgi Plekhanov
Infobox Person
name=Georgi Plekhanov
caption=
birth_date=December 11 /November 29 ,1856
birth_place=Gudalovka, Governorate ofLipetsk
death_date=May 30 /May 17 ,1918
death_place=Terijoki,Finland Georgi Valentinovich Plekhanov (Георгий Валентинович Плеханов) (
December 11 ,1856 –May 30 ,1918 ; "Old Style:"November 29 1856 –May 17 1918 ) was aRussia n revolutionary and aMarxist theoretician. He was a founder of the Social-Democratic movement inRussia and was the first RussianMarxist .Plekhanov contributed many ideas to
Marxism in the area ofphilosophy and the roles of art and religion in society. He wrote extensively onhistorical materialism , on the history of materialist philosophy, on the role of the masses and of the individual in history, on the relationship between thebase and thesuperstructure , on the role ofideologies , on the revolutionary democrats such asBelinsky ,Chernyshevsky ,Herzen and Dobrolyubov, on art and social life, on the origin of art, on developing objective criteria for making judgements about art, on art's role among the other forms of humankind's spiritual life, and so on. In his master work, "The Development of the Monist View of History", Plekhanov wrote an outstanding book that remains a classic of Marxism to the present day. His efforts to popularizeMarxist ideas inRussia during gloomy periods of reaction and repression earned him an honored place in the international working-class movement. He was the author of the famous expression that "without revolutionary theory ... there is no revolutionary movement in the true sense of the word".Plekhanov was one of the organizers of the first political demonstrations in
Russia . After a fiery speech during theKazan demonstration in 1876, indicting the autocracy and defending the ideas ofChernyshevsky , Plekhanov led an underground life. He was arrested twice, in 1877 and again in 1878, and faced with increasing persecution he emigrated in 1880. It would be 37 years before he returned toRussia .In his political activities he adopted the nom de guerre of Volgin, after the
Volga River . Some have commented that this name influenced the famous revolutionary Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov in adopting the nameLenin to highlight his opposition to Plekhanov's politics. This claim is however refuted due to the timing involved. The first instance of Lenin's pseudonym predates any disagreement with Plekhanov.Plekhanov used the
pseudonym of N. Beltov in his most famous work, "The Development of the Monist View of History". Furthermore, in an article on A.L. Volynsky in an issue of "Novoye Slovo" in April, 1897, Plekhanov used thepseudonym of N. Kamensky. Plekhanov wrote an article entitled "A Few Words to our Opponents" for a Marxist Symposium called "Material for a Characterization of Our Economic Development" in 1895. In that article, which along with the rest of the contributions was promptly burned by the censorship of the Tsarist autocracy, Plekhanov used the name of Utis.Plekhanov House , a part of the National Library of Russia, has a card file of the many pen names used by G. V. Plekhanov in his effort to avoid the heavy hand of the censorship.Plekhanov was originally a
Narodnik , a leader of the organization "Land and Liberty". After emigrating from Russia in 1880, he established connections with the Social-Democratic movement of western Europe and began to study the works of Marx and Engels. This led him to renounce Narodism and become a Marxist.In 1883 in
Switzerland , he co-founded with Lev Deutsch andVera Zasulich , the "Emancipation of Labor " group, which popularized Marxism among Russian revolutionaries. At its dissolution, he joined theRussian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP) and worked with Lenin.In 1903, at the second congress of the RSDLP, Plekhanov broke with
Lenin and sided with theMenshevik s. DuringWorld War I , he took a "nationalist" position (as opposed to the Bolsheviks' "proletarian internationalism "), calling for the defeat ofGermany .Lenin accused Plekhanov, along with his other critics, of "social chauvinism" in the April Theses. Plekhanov was quoted as claiming that Lenin was advocating "civil war" in the socialist movement by supporting the creation of a new International after the 1915Zimmerwald Conference and the subsequent dissolving, in 1916, of theSecond International .Despite his differences, Plekhanov was recognized, even in his own lifetime, as having made an outstanding contribution to Marxist philosophy and literature by
Lenin . "The services he rendered in the past," Lenin wrote of Plekhanov, "were immense. During the twenty years between 1883 and 1903 he wrote a large number of splendid essays, especially those against the opportunists, Machists, and Narodniks." Even after theOctober Revolution Lenin insisted on republishing Plekhanov's philosophical works and including these works as compulsory texts for prospective communists.Plekhanov returned to Russia after the
February Revolution and formedYedinstvo . However, he left Russia again after theOctober Revolution because he was hostile toward theBolsheviks . He died oftuberculosis inTerijoki ,Finland (now Zelenogorsk,Saint Petersburg , Russia). He was buried in the Volkovo Cemetery near the graves ofBelinsky and Dobrolyubov. Despite his disagreements with Lenin, the Soviet Communists cherished his memory and gave his name to the Soviet Academy of Economics and the G.V. Plekhanov Saint Petersburg State Mining Institute.In addition, a library established after the October Revolution,
Plekhanov House , part of theRussian National Library , the pride of Russian culture, was named after the famous Russian Marxist. As noted in the Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science:It was organized and headed by Rosalia Plekhanov-Bograd, the widow of the founder of Russian Marxism, and immediately became the most important centre of scholarly analysis of the theoretical legacy left by that prominent thinker.
As noted on the website of
Plekhanov House , soon after Plekhanov's death the Soviet Government, at the initiative of V. I.Lenin , went to Rosalie M. Plekhanova with a proposal to start publishing the works of her late husband and set up an Archive. In 1925, Rosalie Plekhanova presented the Archive and Library to theSoviet Union "having refused various individuals and research institutions, like Musee Social and Institut des Etudes Slaves, which suggested outright acquisition or temporary housing in Prague or in some West European archive institution." According toPlekhanov House :The Public Library as the place was not an accidental choice. According to Rosalie M. Plekhanova, who took an active part in her husband's social and literary work, Plekhanov had always considered the Petersburg Public Library as his "Alma Mater", a spiritual source of theoretical and practical knowledge he resorted to during the early stages of his scholarly and revolutionary activities. Plekhanov's heirs presented his archives and private library together with the furniture of his study in Geneva to the Soviet Union on the condition of integral hold in the Public Library in Leningrad as an organizational unit in a separate area with specialized research staff.
References
* "Georgi Plekhanov: Selected Philosophical Works in Five Volumes" (1974)
Works
* "Socialism and the Political Struggle" (1883)
* "Our Differences" (1885)
* "Gl. I. Uspensky" (1888)
* [http://www.marxists.org/archive/plekhanov/1889/champ/index.htm A New Champion of Autocracy 1889]
* "S. Karonin" (1890)
* [http://www.marxists.org/archive/plekhanov/1895/anarch/index.htm Anarchism & Socialism (1895)]
* [http://www.marxists.org/archive/plekhanov/1895/monist/index.htm The Development of the Monist View of History (1895)]
* "Essays on the History of Materialism" (1896)
* "N. I. Naumov" (1897)
* "A. L. Volynsky: Russian Critics. Literary Essays" (1897)
* "N. G. Chernyshevsky's Aesthetic Theory" (1897)
* [http://www.marxists.org/archive/plekhanov/1897/history/part1.htm The Materialist Conception of History (1891)]
* "For The Sixtieth Anniversary of Hegel's Death" (1891)
* [http://www.marxists.org/archive/plekhanov/1897/belinski/index.htm Belinski and Rational Reality (1897)]
* "On the Question of the Individual's Role in History" (1898)
* "Scientific Socialism and Religion" (1904)
* "French Drama and French Painting of the Eighteenth Century from the Sociological Viewpoint" (1905)
* "The Proletarian Movement and Bourgeois Art" (1905)
* "Henrik Ibsen" (1906)
* "On the Psychology of the Workers' Movement" (1907)
* "Fundamental Problems of Marxism" (1908)
* "The Ideology of Our Present-Day Philistine" (1908)
* " Tolstoy and Nature" (1908)
* "On the So-Called Religious Seekings in Russia" (1909)
* "N. G. Chernyshevsky" (1909)
* "Karl Marx and Lev Tolstoy" (1911)
* "A. I. Herzen and Serfdom" (1911)
* "Dobrolyubov and Ostrovsky" (1911)
* "Art and Social Life" (1912-1913)External links
* [http://www.marxists.org/archive/plekhanov/ Georgi Plekhanov Archive]
* [http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/RUSplekhanov.htm Georgi Plekhanov Biography]
* [http://www.nlr.ru/eng/coll/manuscripts/plekhanov/ The Plekhanov House in The National Library of Russia]
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