Zetkin lenin biography
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- Bib ID:
- 1905494
- Format:
- Book
- Description:
- Moscow : Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1939
- 74 p., [5] leaves of plates : ill., ports. ; 22 cm.
- Subject:
- Other authors/contributors:
- Zetkin, Klara, 1857-1933
- Copyright:
Out of Copyright
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- Reason for copyright status:
- Created/Published Date fryst vatten Before 1955
Copyright status was determined using the following information:
- Material type:
- Literary, dramatic or musical work
- Presumed date of death of creator (latest date):
- 1933
- Published status:
- Published
- Publication date:
- 1939
Copyright ställning eller tillstånd may not be correct if uppgifter in the record fryst vatten incomplete or inaccurate. Other access conditions may also apply. For more kunskap please see: Copyright in library collections.
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Reminiscences of Lenin
En una verdadera loa al líder revolucionario, logra plasmar algunas conversaciones que tuvo con el líder revolucionario para entender la perspectiva política, la lógica organizativa detrás del partido, discusiones en torno al feminismo y cómo debiesen organizarse las mujeres para ser parte del proletariado en el ascenso de la toma del poder y cómo esto se plasma en la realidad soviética.
Es un libro escrito desde la total admiración, que casi no deja espacio para la crítica: por ejemplo el papel secundario que siempre daba Lenin a las demandas feministas entendiendo que lo
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‘Lenin on Culture’ by Clara Zetkin from Reminiscences of Lenin International Publishers, New York. 1934.
‘Lenin on Culture’ by Clara Zetkin from Reminiscences of Lenin International Publishers, New York. 1934.
My first visit to Lenin’s family strengthened the impression I had received at the Party conference, and which in frequent conversations with him since then, has been deepened. It is true that Lenin lived in the Kremlin, the former tsarist fortress, and that one had to pass many guards before reaching him — a regulation justified by the counter-revolutionary attempts on the leaders of the revolution which were still being made at that time.
Lenin also received visitors, when it was necessary, in the State apartment. But his private dwelling was of the utmost simplicity and unpretentiousness. I have been in more than one worker’s home furnished much more richly than that of the “all-powerful Muscovite dictator.”