
Witness to the German Revolution
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Following in the wake of the carnage reaped across Europe by World War I, German workers undertook a struggle that would prove decisive in determining the course of the entire twentieth century. In 1923, the fledgling Comintern (The Communist International) dispatched Victor Serge, with his peerless journalistic skills, to Berlin to expedite the German Revolution and write these moving reports from the battlefront.
Praise for Victor Serge
"He was an eyewitness of events of world historical importance, of great hope and even greater tragedy. His political recollections are very important, because they reflect so well the mood of this lost generation... His articles and books speak for themselves, and we would be poorer without them." - Partisan Review
"I know of no other writer with whom Serge can be very usefully compared. The essence of the man and his books is to be found in his attitude to the truth." -John Berger, Booker Prize-winning author
"The novels, poems, memoirs and other writings of Victor Serge are among the finest works of literature inspired by the October Revolution that brought the working class to power in Russia in 1917... His articles-like the work of John Reed, his American friend-let us follow revolutionary events as they unfold, as seen through the eyes of an exceptionally alert journalist." -Scott McLemee, writer of the weekly "Intellectual Affairs" column for Inside Higher Ed
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Content
- Intro
- Title Page
- Introduction
- Note on Translation
- Acknowledgments
- Chronology
- Abbreviations and German Terms Used in Text
- Letter from Germany to a French Comrade - Correspondance internationale, ...
- II
- III
- Conference Impressions - Bulletin communiste, April 29, 1922
- Balance Sheet of a Year - Correspondance internationale, January 3, 1923
- The Anniversary of January 15: Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg - ...
- News from Germany - Correspondance internationale, February 9, 1923
- A Document on German Patriotism - Correspondance internationale, July 1, 1923
- Amid the Collapse of Bourgeois Germany - Correspondance internationale, July ...
- Reports from Germany - Disturbances at Wroclaw and Frankfurt Correspondance ...
- July 29
- Ehrhardt and Noske
- Scarcity in Berlin - Correspondance internationale, August 4, 1923
- The Bourgeoisie are afraid
- Herr Cuno leaves.
- Comparing Germany and Russia
- Phynances, the gold loan, etc. - Correspondance internationale, August 15, 1923
- The evaporation of wages continues
- The last defender of the German bourgeoisie
- The General Strike in Germany - The Great Coalition: ...
- Some causes and effects of bankruptcy
- The general strike
- A battle won
- Reports from Germany - The Great Coalition at work Correspondance ...
- The official campaign against wages
- By unemployment and by repression
- Hail the fifteenth zero!
- The bourgeoisie won't let a halfpenny go
- Phynances and stupidity
- Herr Helfferich proposes
- The Ruhr profiteers - Correspondance internationale, September 15, 1923
- The victims of the Ruhr
- A bluff: the confiscation of foreign currency
- A truth of Herr Stinnes
- Journeys
- In the social democracy
- In Thuringia.
- .not a halfpenny!
- The Sorau massacre - Correspondance internationale, September 22, 1923
- Herr von Knilling threatens
- On the streets of Berlin
- Murder of the hungry
- Starvation wages
- And the libertarians?
- Fascists and Communists - Correspondance internationale, September 29, 1923
- Towards civil war
- Dilemma
- What would that mean?
- Between two dictatorships
- Von Kahr and Gessler-imitation dictators
- The fascist advance
- Figures
- Red Sunday in Düsseldorf - Correspondance internationale, October 6, 1923
- Pseudo-dictatorship to the right
- Genuine dictatorship to the left
- Those who understand nothing
- Well above the dollar
- The great assault on the eight-hour day
- Küstrin
- The reactionaries benefit from martial law-a great deal
- Social Democracy judged by its allies
- Correspondance internationale, October 13, 1923
- Interregnum
- Constitutional dictatorship - Correspondance internationale, October 20, 1923
- Eve of battle in red Saxony
- Why Social Democracy is changing
- Provoke in order to repress
- Towards a German Commune
- Social Democracy in a dead end
- Hunger riots
- Significant episodes
- Munich versus Berlin - Correspondance internationale, October 27, 1923
- In Saxony: Russian intervention and "Tartar News"
- A visit to Hitler
- Hunger on the streets
- In the fray
- Double standards
- City without bread
- Hunger and rioting everywhere
- Inflation to cure inflation
- The failure of the left Social Democrats - Correspondance internationale, ...
- The ultimatum to Zeigner
- Buchrucker and Thorell
- Ministerial Marxism
- "Real value" paper and wages
- They are complementary
- One more betrayal
- The threat against Thuringia
- In the Social Democracy: The wave of nausea
- The avalanche
- Two anniversaries: November 7 and 9 - Correspondance internationale, November ...
- For a right wing dictatorship
- The financial muddle
- Effects and causes
- The suicide of the German republic
- The fruits of Social Democratic treachery
- Pogroms in Berlin
- Via bankruptcy to capitalist dictatorship
- Hitler: A fascist ideology - Correspondance internationale, November 17, 1923
- The Munich tragicomedy
- The first week of the new inflation
- The Berlin printers' strike
- The disarming of red Thuringia
- The abandonment of the Rhine and the Ruhr
- To break the Berlin printers' strike
- Arrests, arrests, arrests.
- A comic paper
- The fate of the eight-hour day - Correspondance internationale, November 20, 1923
- Rentenmark and wage-mark
- Wanted: a chancellor - Bulletin communiste, December 6, 1923
- The Communist Party legally illegal
- Acts of white terror
- Herr Severing's opinion
- A Marx government
- The balance sheet: formidable powerlessness - Correspondance internationale, ...
- Unemployment, a revolutionary problem
- Humor
- The Rich against the Nation - Berlin, October 1923 Clarté, November 1923
- The Rich against Culture - Writers and Artists Clarté, December 1, 1923
- Way of life
- The arts and sciences...
- The Stinnesation of intellectual life
- At the turning point
- A 50-Day Armed Vigil - Clarté, February 1 & 15, 1924
- The march towards civil war
- On the threshold...
- Chemnitz, Munich
- The KPD criticizes itself
- The retreat is not a defeat
- The situation is still revolutionary
- Postscript
- Further Reading
- Key Figures
- Appendix
- About Haymarket Books
- Also from Haymarket Books
- Copyright Page
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