The Fifth International: International or Global?
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Published:2019-09-03
Issue:2
Volume:25
Page:321-328
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ISSN:1076-156X
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Container-title:Journal of World-Systems Research
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language:
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Short-container-title:JWSR
Abstract
Worth welcomes Amin’s call for a renewal of Internationalism, but he is critical of the “significant shortcoming of understanding an internationalist strategy around a traditional collection of national struggles.” Recalling Rosa Luxemburg’s contributions to the second International at the 100th anniversary of her brutal murder, he notes: Luxemburg … condemned any form of nationalism as a tool used by the bourgeoisie in order to divide the proletariat….[F]or Luxemburg, the whole notion of dialectical materialism should be understood not through the development of existing structures but as a process where new structures emerge and develop over time. Likewise, Internationalism should not be something restricted by structures of the present, nor by pre-existing norms such as national sovereign, but instead be understood as a mechanism that could move beyond the confines of the present towards the realms of the ‘possible.’”
Publisher
University Library System, University of Pittsburgh
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science