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==Signification== | ==Signification== | ||
The term Marxism-Leninism generally distinguishes parties which took the Russian Revolution of 1917 as foundational | The term Marxism-Leninism generally distinguishes parties which took the Russian Revolution of 1917 as foundational while other socialist formations including but not limited to [[Libertarian socialism]], [[Eurocommunism]], [[Austro-Marxism]], [[Bernsteinianism]], [[Syndicalism]], [[Anarcho-communism]], [[Daniel De Leon|DeLeonism]], and [[Social democracy]] reject it. | ||
== References == | == References == |
Revision as of 19:50, 17 April 2022
Marxism-Leninism is an ideological framework that originated in the application of Marxist theory to revolutionary practice by Vladimir Lenin and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union. It is based on dialectical materialism, the materialist conception of history, and Marxist political economy including the Leninist conception of imperialism.
After the success of the Russian revolution in 1917 and the establishment of the Soviet Union in 1922, many communist parties around the world began to adopt Marxism-Leninism as their political line, and Marxism-Leninism was the main theoretical framework which guided the Korean, Vietnamese, and Chinese revolutions as well as other successful national liberation and revolutionary movements in Africa and Asia.
Today, Marxism–Leninism is one of the theoretical foundations of governing communist parties in China, Cuba, Korea, Laos and Vietnam, and is the political line of many communist parties waging class struggle.
Origin of the term
In the 1920s, the term Marxism-Leninism was first formulated and defined by Joseph Stalin based on his synthesis of orthodox Marxist theory and Lenin's thought.
Lenin never coined the term "Leninism" "Marxism-Leninism"; rather, his ideas developed upon classical Marxist thought. His ideas were viewed by the Bolsheviks and many later communists as a major advance in Marxism.
Characteristics
Dialectical and historical materialism
Marxism-Leninism follows the various tenets of Marx's materialist conception of history, such as primacy of the development of the productive forces in driving historical change.
Critique of imperialism
Imperialism as seen and described by Lenin is the highest stage of capitalism,[1] involving the domination of the economy by monopolies and the export of capital as the principal form of exploitation and accumulation engaged in by the leading capitalist countries. Imperialism in the Leninist sense is essentially limited to the capitalist era.
Imperialism entails savage competition between the leading capitalist countries for colonies and spheres of influence, culminating in imperialist wars (such as the First Wold War, which Lenin witnessed).
Party organization principles
Marxist-Leninist parties usually adhere to the principle of democratic centralism which involves free debate within the party and democratic development of party policies by the party members and their elected committees and leaders, but strict adherence by party members to those policies once the policies have been chosen.
Strategy and tactics of revolution
Marxist-Leninists hold that successful revolutions involve more than spontaneous, elemental action by the masses but require a vanguard party to provide them theoretical guidance and, in the revolutionary moment, tactical leadership. The vanguard (Communist) party is based on full-time revolutionaries and is a repository of revolutionary experience.
Theory and practice of the dictatorship of the proletariat
Marxist-Leninists adhere to Marx's two-stages model of communism, involving an initial, "lower" stage, often termed "socialism", which is transitional between capitalism and "higher" stage communism in which the state, money, and other vestiges of capitalism and class society no longer exist. In the lower stage a state, controlled by the proletariat, remains necessary to defend against counter-revolution and to guide society away from capitalistic behaviours and toward cooperation and the "free association of the producers" which characterise true or higher-stage communism. The lower stage is also known as the dictatorship of the proletariat since it involves control of society by the proletariat.
Belief in the necessity of the dictatorship of the proletariat distinguishes Marxism-Leninism from more anarchistic tendencies within social liberation theory.
Signification
The term Marxism-Leninism generally distinguishes parties which took the Russian Revolution of 1917 as foundational while other socialist formations including but not limited to Libertarian socialism, Eurocommunism, Austro-Marxism, Bernsteinianism, Syndicalism, Anarcho-communism, DeLeonism, and Social democracy reject it.