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| | Glossary of People: L |
 | | While Luxemburg was the speaker and theoretician of the party, Jogiches complimented her as the organiser of the party. |  | | Born on March 5th, 1871 in Zamoshc of Congress Poland, Rosa Luxemburg was born into a Jewish family, the youngest of five children. |  | | While in Zürich, Luxemburg continued her revolutionary activities from abroad, while studying political economy and law; receiving her doctorate in 1898. |
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http://www.marxists.org/glossary/people/l/u.htm
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | Luxemburg was born in March 1871 in Zamosch, Poland. |  | | In 1889, aged 18 and because of her revolutionary agitation, she had to leave for Zurich in Switzerland. |  | | Luxemburg wanted a complete revolution of governmental systems. |
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http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/rosa_luxemburg.htm
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| | Vladimir Ilich Vs |
 | | Rosa felt that there were no two opinions among the Russian Social-Democrats as to the need for a united Party, and that the whole controversy was over the degree of centralisation. |  | | She was one of the leaders of the revolutionary German workers during the November 1918 revolution and took part in the Inaugural Congress of the Communist Party of Germany. |  | | Rosa had certain apprehensions about the November 1917 revolution where Bolsheviks seized power. |
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http://www.cpiml.org/archive/vm_swork/78vladimir_ilich_vs_roja.htm
(2998 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | Although reluctantly, Rosa Luxemburg bowed to this decision and wrote and acted in its spirit. |  | | Luxemburg, "The Mass Strike, the Political Party, and the Trade Unions" (1906; NY: Harper and Row, 1971). |  | | However, the majority of the congress voted in favor of anti-parliamentarism and for a struggle against the trade unions. |
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http://www.geocities.com/CapitolHill/Lobby/2379/rosa.htm
(7938 words)
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| | [No title] |
 | | How Luxemburg arrived at the state of supreme self-confidence is a study in heroism. |  | | Luxemburg said the law of movement of these phenomena is clear. |  | | Luxemburg's friend Clara Zutkin became the leader of the SPD's women's movement.. |
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http://www.cddc.vt.edu/feminism/Luxemburg.html
(6262 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg: A life inspired |
 | | Rosa became involved in revolutionary politics when she was still at school in Poland. |  | | But we combine that confidence with a determination to learn from her mistakes and build a party, which can ensure that next time the struggle, will be successful. |  | | Credit could only temporarily delay a crisis and would also intensify it, Monopoly capitalism had not eradicated competition which was sharpening between the imperialist countries resulting in further conflict when war broke out in 1914. |
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http://www.socialistparty.org.uk/socialistwomen/sw11.htm
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | Luxemburg became a journalist in 1894 and, by that time, she was already considered one of the leaders of the Social Democratic Party in Poland and Lithuania. |  | | She became a German citizen in 1898 through marriage, and became a leader of the German Social Democratic Party (SPD). |  | | Luxemburg was born in Russian-controlled Poland in 1871. |
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http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/biography/Rosa_Luxemburg.html
(393 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg - definition of Rosa Luxemburg in Encyclopedia |
 | | With Leo Jogiches, she co-founded the Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland (SDKP), which was later to become the Socialist Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania (SDKPiL) by merging with Lithuania's social democratic organisation. |  | | Both Luxemburg and Liebknecht were captured in Berlin by the Freikorps on 15 January 1919 and murdered on the same day. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg was born Rosalia Luxemburg on March 5, 1870 or 1871 in Zamość near Lublin in what is now Poland. |
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http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/Rosa_Luxemburg
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| | Introduction to `Rosa Luxemburg or Lenin |
 | | It would, however, be just as wrong to counter-pose to this mistake the opposite one, that 'Luxemburgism' is the superior revolutionary doctrine to Leninism. |  | | All three are equally dear to the hearts of the revolutionary working class. |  | | In a country where the working class did not constitute a small minority of the population as in Russia, but the majority. |
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http://www.revolutionary-history.co.uk/otherdox/Whatnext/Thljones.html
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | Rosa Luxemburg, the youngest of five children of a lower middle-class Jewish family was born in Zamosc, in the Polish area of Russia, on 5th March, 1871. |  | | She became interested in politics while still at school and in an attempt to escape the authoritarian government of Alexander III, emigrated to Zurich in 1889 where she studied law and political economy. |  | | In 1905 August Bebel appointed Luxemburg editor of SPD newspaper, |
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http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/RUSluxemburg.htm
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| | Rosa Luxemburg and German Socialism |
 | | Rosa became a martyr of socialism as a result of her death at the hands of the government. |  | | She initially became involved with movements in high school in Warsaw, and continued her involvement in the Polish Social movement after she graduated. |  | | The party congress in 1906 stated that while there may have been possibilities for a revolution, they no longer were present. |
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http://www.bu.edu/econ/faculty/kyn/newweb/economic_systems/Theory/Marxism/German_sd/rosa_luxemburg.htm
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| | New Socialist Group: Rosa Luxemburg and Revolutionary Democracy |
 | | This challenge (and especially the challenge of revolutionary democracy) is poignantly relevant to all countries, from Russia to Poland, from Germany to the United States, from Japan to China to India, from South Africa to Cuba to Brazil. |  | | Public life gradually falls asleep, a few dozen party leaders of inexhaustible energy and boundless experience direct and rule. |  | | 2 Quoted in Wendy Forrest, Rosa Luxemburg (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1989), 61. |
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http://www.newsocialist.org/index.php?id=764
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| | LitWeb.net |
 | | She started her career as a journalist and became one of the leaders of the Social Democratic Party of the Kingdom of Poland and Lithuania. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg was born in Zamosc, in Russian Poland, into a Jewish middle-class family. |  | | After the Spartacist uprising in Berlin against the government, in which she participated reluctantly, Luxemburg and Liebknecht were arrested in 1919. |
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http://www.biblion.com/litweb/biogs/luxemburg_rosa.html
(918 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | Rosa Luxemburg was born March 5, 1871 in Zamoßç, Poland of a middle class, Jewish |  | | Rosa Luxemburg was arguably one of the finest political theorists of the 20th century. |  | | In 1898 Luxemburg moved to Germany, marrying another |
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http://wings.buffalo.edu/info-poland/web/history/hist_persons/lux/cached.htm
(441 words)
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| | Luxemburg, Rosa on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Comrade Luxemburg and Comrade Gramsci pass each other at a Congress of the Second International in Switzerland on the 10th of March, 1912.(fiction) |  | | Her revolutionary activities forced her to flee to Switzerland in 1889, where she became a Marxist. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg and Hannah Arendt: against the destruction of political spheres of freedom.(Reprint) |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/L/LuxemburR1.asp
(620 words)
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| | IALHI News Service: Rosa Luxemburg Reader |
 | | In addition to providing an important analysis of Marxist theory and revolutionary politics, the texts here are historically instructive regarding the ideological and political fractures in German Social Democracy before and during the First World War. |  | | For Luxemburg, the question "reform or revolution" concerned "the very existence of the Social Democratic movement" (p. |  | | Luxemburg considered the SPD's support for war credits to be nothing less than the betrayal of the working class by its own party (p. |
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http://www.ialhi.org/news/i0506_4.html
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| | Rosa Luxemburg -- Britannica Student Encyclopedia |
 | | Parks, Rosa L. By refusing to give up her bus seat to a white man in the segregated South, Rosa Parks sparked the United States civil rights movement. |  | | Polish-born German revolutionary and agitator who played a key role in the founding of the Polish Social Democratic Party and the Spartacus League, which grew into the Communist Party of Germany. |  | | German Social Democrat, who, with Rosa Luxemburg and other radicals, founded the Spartakusbund (Spartacus League), a Berlin underground group that became the Communist Party of Germany, dedicated to a socialist revolution. |
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http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article-9275561
(640 words)
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| | Martyrdom of Liebknecht and Luxemburg |
 | | Runge was sentenced to 25 months in jail by this trial court and all the officers were acquitted. |  | | Stalin noted that Luxemburg had declared for the Mensheviks, arguing that the Bolsheviks had tendencies to Blanquism and ultra-centralism. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg correctly understood the role of the working class as the decisive force of the revolution, recognised the need for an armed uprising against tsarism and the establishment of the dictatorship of the proletariat. |
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http://revolutionarydemocracy.org/rdv5n1/luxembrg.htm
(3018 words)
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| | Luxemburg, Rosa - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Luxemburg, Rosa |
 | | German communist Rosa Luxemburg was the leader of the Social Democratic Party and the Spartacus Party in the late 1890s–early 1900s. |  | | She helped found the Polish Social Democratic Party in the 1890s, the forerunner of the Polish Communist Party. |  | | She disagreed with leading Polish left-wing ideologists on the issue of Polish nationalism. |
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http://encyclopedia.farlex.com/Luxemburg,+Rosa
(213 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | Rosa Luxemburg was born in Poland in 1870 and became a Socialist in 1890, helping to establish the Polish Socialist Party. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg : A Revolutionary for Our Times |  | | Luxemburg spent most of World War I in prison. |
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http://www.multied.com/bio/people/Luxemburg.html
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| | History and Class Consciousness Georg Lukacs |
 | | This is the question of the role to be played by the state (the soviets, the form of state of the victorious proletariat) in the socio-economic transformation of society. |  | | This is the cause in whose support the revered authority of Rosa Luxemburg is to be enlisted. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg herself admits this candidly: “As a political measure to fortify the proletarian socialist government, it was an excellent tactical move. |
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http://www.marxists.org.uk/archive/lukacs/works/history/ch07.htm
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| | Luxemburg, Rosa - Columbia Encyclopedia article about Luxemburg, Rosa |
 | | The name was derived from the pseudonym Spartacus used by Liebknecht in his pamphlets denouncing World War I, the government, and the majority section of the Social Democratic party; the name was used to typify the modern wage slave in revolt like the Roman gladiator. |  | | Her revolutionary activities forced her to flee to Switzerland in 1889, where she became a Marxist. |  | | She participated in the revolution of 1905 in Russian Poland and was active in the Second International, working with Lenin to demand socialist opposition to war, while using it for revolution. |
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http://columbia.thefreedictionary.com/Luxemburg,+Rosa
(431 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | Luxemburg was the main leader of the "Spartacus League" formed during the World War I to counter the German Social Democrats' support of the war. |  | | She had been the founder of the Polish Social Democratic Party and headed the left wing of the German Social Democratic Party. |  | | The Polish-born "Red Rosa" was one of the leaders in the 1919 Spartacist Revolution in Germany which ended with her murder while in the custody of the German army. |
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http://cepa.newschool.edu/het/profiles/luxemb.htm
(462 words)
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| | Journal of Marxist-Humanism news and letters December'98 |
 | | She became Trotsky's secretary during his exile in Mexico (1937-38). |  | | This began with her view of Rosa Luxemburg. |  | | She shows a connection between the question of racism and the struggles against it, and the early connections and convergences throughout the world between women's liberation, the workers' movement, and immigration. |
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http://www.newsandletters.org/Issues/1998/Dec/12-98rosa.htm
(1206 words)
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| | Berlin: The City as Body The City as Metaphor |
 | | Rosa Luxemburg was the youngest of five children of a lower middle-class Jewish family in Russian-ruled Poland. |  | | The national issue became one of Luxemburg's main themes. |  | | She became involved in underground activities while still in high school. |
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http://www.stanford.edu/dept/german/berlin_class/people/luxemburg.html
(601 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | She was born on March 5, 1871, in Zamoßç, Poland (then a part of Russia), and was educated in Warsaw, where she became active in political societies. |  | | Luxemburg reluctantly took part in the unsuccessful Spartacist uprising against the government in January 1919, and both she and Liebknecht were arrested and murdered by German troops on the 15th of that month. |  | | Luxemburg, Rosa (1871-1919), German socialist leader and revolutionary, prominent in the international socialist movements in the early years of the 20th century. |
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http://www.distinguishedwomen.com/biographies/luxembur.html
(256 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg, "The War and the Workers"--The Junius Pamphlet |
 | | Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) had for years warned against the stultifying effects of the overly bureaucratized German Social Democratic Party and the anti-revolutionary tendencies of the trade unions that played such a large role in the party's policy decisions. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg, "The War and the Workers"--The Junius Pamphlet |  | | Published under the name "Junius," perhaps a reference to Lucius Junius Brutus, a legendary republican hero of ancient Rome, the pamphlet became the guiding statement for the International Group, which became the Spartacus League and ultimately the Communist Party of Germany (January 1, 1919). |
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http://www.h-net.org/~german/gtext/kaiserreich/lux.html
(8331 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | Luxemburg is a legendary figure in socialist circles, born in 1872, murdered during the unsuccessful Sparacist rebellion in Germany in 1919, she was a leading Marxist theoretician. |  | | But to younger radicals what shouldstand out was the pervasive anti-militarism both of Rosa Luxemburg, and of the political movement of which she was a part. |  | | That movement is shown as it was - a major force in European politics, headed by men and women who had hoped to secure social revolution through the electoral process. |
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http://journals.aol.com/bloomingtoncp/news/entries/1507
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| | A talk on Rosa Luxemburg (by L. Proyect) |
 | | This was the question I in fact put to him. |  | | What he was also anxious to make clear was that Luxemburg's criticisms were offered in the context of support for the revolution and in solidarity with the Communist Party of the Soviet Union itself. |  | | Bergmann stated that Luxemburg resisted Kremlin control when the Communist Party of Germany was formed. |
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http://www.columbia.edu/~lnp3/mydocs/organization/bergmann.htm
(404 words)
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| | Geduld der Rosa Luxemburg, Die (1986) |
 | | She was a member of the Socialist Democratic Party in Germany, and she also spent some time in her native Poland. |  | | She was murdered during the unsuccessful Spartacist rebellion in Germany, right after Germany's defeat in World War I. I don't know much about Luxemburg, but as the film portrays her, she was a very forceful, compassionate, and strident devotee of peace and justice for the working class. |  | | We see her giving speeches, writing articles, and pressing the Socialist Democratic party elders for quicker movements toward "revolution." Ultimately, Rosa wanted an overthrow of the "old order," meaning the monarchic/industrial/fascist forces, and direct control of the political system by the workers themselves. |
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http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0091869
(365 words)
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| | Reform or revolution |
 | | Luxemburgs explanation of the role of trade unions, elections and struggles in winning reforms--and sowing the seeds of revolutionary change--remain relevant 100 years later. |  | | WHEN POLISH-BORN socialist Rosa Luxemburg moved to Germany in 1898, it was the center of socialist thought and home to the largest socialist party in the world--the Social Democratic Party (SPD). |  | | Luxemburg's response was published in full in the 1908 pamphlet Reform or Revolution. |
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http://www.socialistworker.org/2004-2/505/505_08_ReformOrRevolution.shtml
(1135 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | Luxemburg was a leader of both the German and Polish Socialist parties who advocated an anti-colonialist and pacifist stance on the issues of her day. |  | | She clung to Marx's teachings when Lenin was rewriting the master to fit his own needs. |  | | Von Trotta based her film on historical research and some of the more than 2,000 letters Rosa Luxemburg wrote during her active life. |
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http://www.atasite.org/calendar/info.shtml?x=768
(384 words)
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| | Commentary Magazine - Comrade and Lover: Rosa Luxemburg's Letters to Leo Jogiches, edited by Elzbietta Ettinger |
 | | ...THE career of Rosa Luxemburg spanned the final decade of the 19th century and the first two decades of the 20th, during which time MARK FALCOFF is a National Fellow of the Hoover Institution on War, Revo- lution, and Peace, Stanford University... |  | | ...At the time of her murder, Rosa Luxemburg was only forty-nine years old... |  | | ...In the first (1893-97), Rosa Luxemburg is not only Jogiches's lover, but his ardent disciple in politics and philosophy... |
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http://www.commentarymagazine.com/Summaries/V69I4P92-1.htm
(1688 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg - Wikipedia |
 | | Yth hembrenkyas hi an movyans almaynek rag domhwelans marksydh (an Spartakusbund) a eth ha bos Parti Kemmynegorek Almayn. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg (Polonek: Róża Luksemburg; 5ves a vis Meurth 1870 po 1871 – 15ves a vis Genver 1919) o gwlasegoryes almaynek sosialistek. |
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http://kw.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosa_Luxemburg
(96 words)
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| | Stephen Eric Bronner: Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | "This small booklet is a useful and sympathetic synthesis of Rosa Luxenburg's life and work, and their relevance for present-day politics. |  | | He is the author of, most recently, Moments of Decision: Political History and Crises of Radicalism and Socialism Unbound and the editor of The Letters of Rosa Luxemburg. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) was Polish, Jewish, and a woman in an international socialist movement dominated by Germans, gentiles, and men. |
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http://www.psupress.org/books/titles/0-271-02505-0.html
(284 words)
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| | Amazon.com: Reform or Revolution: Books: Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | This was Rosa Luxemburg and this is her first important book. |  | | Born in Poland she gravitated to Berlin just as Edward Bernsein was leading the German Social-Democratic Party and all of European socailism toward a reformist, revisionist position which would become his philosophical legacy the to world. |  | | This is an English translation of the most significant book ever written by Rosa Luxemburg, the great European socialist theorist and revolutionary. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0873483030?v=glance
(1315 words)
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| | Artist Mark Vallen's essay on Anton Raderscheidt. |
 | | It was an homage to Luxemburg, who had been viciously murdered by rightist thugs. |  | | Other Expressionist artists also created works to honor the martyred Luxemburg, most notably Conrad Felixmüller and Käthe Kollwitz. |  | | Luxemburg was highly regarded by many German workers, artists, and intellectuals, and her assassination foretold of the bloodbath that was to totally engulf the country in years to come. |
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http://www.art-for-a-change.com/Express/ex9.htm
(145 words)
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| | ROSA: A Novel by Jonathan Rabb |
 | | Order returned only when the two leaders of the movement—Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg—were hunted down and assassinated on the fifteenth of January, 1919. |  | | A genuine mystery at the time, Rosa’s fate has continued to prompt speculation to this day. |  | | Liebknecht’s body was discovered the next morning; Luxemburg’s body, however, remained missing until the end of May. |
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http://www.randomhouse.com/crown/rosa
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| | The Beginnings of May Day in Australia |
 | | In 1884, the 1st of May 1886 had been chosen as the day the Federation of Organised Trade and Labour Unions of the United States and Canada had earmarked "as the date from and after which eight hours shall constitute a legal days labour". |  | | Rosa Luxemburg what are the origins of may day? |  | | The happy idea of using a proletarian holiday celebration as a means to attain the eight-hour day was first born in Australia. |
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http://www.takver.com/history/mayday.htm
(1644 words)
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| | Personality of the Week - Luxemburg |
 | | Luxemburg spent most of the war in German prisons. |  | | In 1914 she founded, together with Karl Liebknecht, the Spartacus League which opposed World War I. The Spartacists followed Marx and Engels and had revolutionary aims. |  | | In 1898 Rosa Luxemburg became a German citizen and wrote for German journals. |
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http://www.bh.org.il/names/POW/Luxemburg.asp
(188 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | A poignant dramatization of the personal and political struggles of Spartacist leader Rosa Luxemburg, whose passionate pursuit of justice caused her to be imprisoned throughout her life and eventually murdered. |  | | The film was supposed to be directed by Rainer Werner Fassbinder, but Von Trotta took over the project after his death. |  | | "...[Luxemburg] receives a full-scale rehabilitation in Von Trotta's stern, elegiac ROSA LUXEMBURG and a tender and passionate characterization by Barbara Sukowa..." |
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http://www.videoflicks.com/titles/1048/1048383.htm
(410 words)
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| | German Life: Library: Rosa Luxemburg@ HighBeam Research |
 | | The 1985 film, available for the first time on video in the United States, is a collaborative effort by two of the most powerful German women currently working in film. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg offers a selective but highly informative view of its controversial namesake. |  | | Luxemburg's life consisted of such a wide array of personal and political concerns that any view is, out of necessity, limited. |
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http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1P1:28349097&refid=holomed_1
(180 words)
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| | news and letters archives column--May 1998 |
 | | At least for a time in his life he extolled woman as few poets did. |  | | There is no doubt that Rosa was so enamored of the proletariat as revolutionary that she seems to subsume the woman in her concept of revolutionary. |  | | This is NOT because it is one of the rare things in which she did speak of women, since the women it speaks about are not those working class women and socialist women with whom she worked. |
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http://www.newsandletters.org/Issues/1998/May/5-98arch.htm
(1412 words)
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| | Amazon.com: Rosa Luxemburg: Reflections and Writings (Revolutionary Series): Books: Rosa Luxemburg,Paul Le Blanc |
 | | Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) was born in Poland (then divided under German and Russian domination), into a fairly well-to-do and cultured family that enabled this exceptionally bright daughter to pursue an education in Warsaw and then Zurich. |  | | Rosa Luxemburg: Reflections and Writings (Revolutionary Series) (Hardcover) |  | | by Rosa Luxemburg (Editor), Paul Le Blanc (Editor) "Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) was born in Poland (then divided under German and Russian domination), into a fairly well-to-do and cultured family that enabled this exceptionally..." (more) |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1573927287?v=glance
(596 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg specs at MSN Shopping |
 | | Luxemburg was convinced this goal could be realized only through the struggles of the working class majority. |  | | More sampling of Luxemburg's luminous and often exciting writings that have generally not been among those commonly anthologized. |  | | A reevaluation and renewal within the Left has allowed the ideas of Luxemburg to assume greater vitality and relevance today than ever before. |
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http://shopping.msn.com/specs/shp?itemId=2490741
(97 words)
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| | The Rosa Luxemburg Reader edited by Peter Hudis and Kevin B. Anderson |
 | | Among the major Marxist thinkers of the period of the Russian Revolution, Rosa Luxemburg stands out as one who speaks to our own time. |  | | Rosa Luxemburgs writings continue to be relevant
The Rosa Luxemburg reader will aptly serve to introduce her perceptive commentaries to a whole new generation of social and political activists. |  | | The Reader also includes a number of important texts that have never before been published in English translation, including substantial extracts from her Introduction to Political Economy (1916), and a recently-discovered piece on slavery. |
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http://www.monthlyreview.org/rosaluxemburg.htm
(544 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg |
 | | The story of Jewish German political activist Rosa Luxemburg. |  | | Barbara Sukowa (Rosa Luxemburg), Daniel Olbrychski (Leo Jogiches), Otto Sander (Karl Liebknecht), Adelheid Arndt (Luise Kautsky), Jurgen Holtz (Karl Kautsky), Doris Schade (Clara Zetkin), Hannes Jaenicke (Kostja Zetkin), Jan(Paul Biczycki (August Bebel), Karin Baal (Mathilde Jacob), Winifred Glatzeder (Paul Levi), Regina Lemnitz (Gertrud), Barbara Lass (Rosa's Mother), Dagna Drozdek (Rosa at Age 6). |
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http://www.vernonjohns.org/snuffy1186/rosa.html
(223 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg Library |
 | | Many of Luxemburg's works are still in copyright as they have been translated within the last thirty odd years and we are therefore most grateful to a number of publishers who have allowed us to place her works on the Marxist Internet Archive. |  | | There is also a fine collection of her letters, all new translations called Letters of Rosa Luxemburg produced by Humanities in 1998. |  | | Edited by Hudis and Anderson, it contains, in addition to a scholarly introduction and improved versions of some already published works, some totally new translations by Passmore and Anderson including a number of writings on women, slavery and the Russian Social Democracy. |
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http://www.marxists.org/archive/luxemburg
(566 words)
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| | Rosa Luxemburg Reader :: AK Press |
 | | Including her major political and economic work, many previously un-translated and recently discovered texts, and a substantial introduction from the editors, this is certainly the best place to start. |  | | "Rosa Luxemburg travels in the 21st century like a great messenger bird, spanning continents, scanning history, to remind us that our present is not new but a continuation of a long human conflict changing only in intensity and scope. |  | | The definitive one-volume collection of Luxemburg's writings in English translation. |
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http://www.akpress.org/2004/items/rosaluxemburgreader
(186 words)
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