University Press of America
Pages: 108
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7618-5903-1 • Paperback • September 2012 • $40.99 • (£35.00)
978-0-7618-5904-8 • eBook • September 2012 • $38.50 • (£30.00)
Martin Comack has been employed as a soldier, merchant seaman, civil servant, and university lecturer. He received a doctorate in political science from Northeastern University, holds graduate degrees from Harvard and the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and attended the Academy of Labor and Social Relations (Moscow) as well as the Fundacion para la Educacion de Trabajadores (Mexico).
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Berlin
Chapter 3: The Urban Proletariat
Chapter 4: German Social Democracy
Chapter 5: The Trade Unions
Chapter 6: Wartime
Chapter 7: The Workers Councils
Chapter 8: Revolution
Chapter 9: 1919
Chapter 10: 1920
Chapter 11: Council Communism
Chapter 12: Conclusion
Appendices
A. Chronology
B. Abbreviations
Bibliography
About the Author
[This book is] a valuable contribution to the understanding of Germany social history that carries important implications for the situation of labor until today.
— Journal of Social History
…How relevant is Wild Socialism for today? One only needs to think of the Arab Spring, anti-austerity debt riots in Greece, spontaneous mass strikes of workers in China, or mass labor protests in Wisconsin — to appreciate Comack’s history of a revolutionary moment in troubling times.
— Elaine Bernard, executive director, Labor and Worklife Program, Harvard Law School
...Scrupulously researched with prose as clear as a bell, he takes us through the twists and turns of German social democracy and trade unions before, during, and after World War I with great clarity in this very readable volume. Wild Socialism is must-read for not only historians of the period, but for those interested in the working class and labor activism.
— Thomas Juravich, Labor Center / Sociology
…A welcome addition to the literature on post-World War I Germany….He skillfully delineates the bureaucratic degeneration of the German Social Democratic Party and trade unions during the previous thirty years which led them to become complicity with the Imperial regime and its war….Comack writes with remarkable clarity and is able to describe the complex situations in an accessible manner….Comack is to be commended…
— Steve Kellerman, delegate, Boston Branch, Industrial Workers of the World