| 1. | " A national democratic
government would be established of patriotic bloc of four classes
(proletariat, peasantry, urban petty-bourgeoisie and national
bourgeoisie) through the revolutionary seizure of state power."
| Source: | Reid, Ben. "Crisis in the Philippines Left: Implications for the Asia Pacific" Journal of Contemporary Asia 30.2 May 1 2000: 181  |
|
| 2. | " Its
criteria change over time and at different times cause different unions
to appear as class associations. "Proletariat" and
"bourgeoisie," "working class"..."
| Source: | Lepsius, M. Rainer. "The nation and nationalism in Germany" Social Research 71.3 Sept. 22 2004: 481-501  |
|
| 3. | " Hatred of the bourgeoisie is ultimately the
bourgeoisie's hatred of itself; the proletariat is too busy
emulating the bourgeoisie to hate it. The contradiction out of which
communism arose was not the contradiction between classes; it was the
contradiction between democracy and capitalism."
| Source: | Skidelsky, Edward. "The Passing of an Illusion" New Statesman (1996) 128.4446 July 26 1999: 46-48  |
|
| 4. | " The crowd, pressing in
from all sides, is no longer the marching proletariat of The Entry into
Jerusalem, but rather the masked and garish faces of the bourgeoisie,
the clergy and the military; in other words, Belgium's ruling
classes."
| Source: | CANNING, SUSAN M. "In the Realm of the Social" Art in America 88.2 Feb. 1 2000: 74  |
|
| 5. | " Although the spirit of
eighteenth-century enlightened materialism was strongly present in
communism, the key difference was in the way the struggle developed
between the radical bourgeoisie bent on a "scholarly" struggle
and the proletarians who supported a "class" struggle against
religion. [8] Secularization..."
| Source: | Radie, Radmila. "THE PROSELYTIZING NATURE OF MARXISM-LENINISM" Journal of Ecumenical Studies Jan. 1 1999: 80  |
|
| 6. | "... the capitalist state (education, social welfare, etc.) have been
developed to a greater or lesser degree, etc.
(15.) "In contemporary France ... the two fundamental classes
are the bourgeoisie and the proletariat."
| Source: | MILIOS, JOHN. "Social Classes in Classical and Marxist Political Economy" American Journal of Economics and Sociology 59.2 Apr. 1 2000: 283  |
|
| 7. | " Intellectual arrogance, the superior
airs that highbrow commentators assume when they talk about the
"masses," the "lumpen-proletariat," "the
low-brows" or worst of all, the "middle-class," the
"bourgeoisie," or "booboisie," as H.L. Mencken
called the American people."
| Source: | Beichman, Arnold. "Wall of historic oversight" Washington Times Oct. 13 1999: 17  |
|
| 8. | " On the
off chance that a proletarian rose up from the mass, the very act of
rising would take him away from his working-class roots; "By
fighting against the bourgeoisie,..."
| Source: | LUCAS, SCOTT. "The socialist fallacy" New Statesman (1996) 129.4488 May 29 2000: 47  |
|
| 9. | "... direct action by the people.
"To rebel" here means to engage in class struggle, to keep the
revolution going, to institute "total proletarian
dictatorship" in every aspect of life including the painful
"thought reform" of individual hearts and minds."
| Source: | Zehou, Li. "SUBJECTIVITY AND "SUBJECTALITY": A RESPONSE" Philosophy East and West 49.2 Apr. 1 1999: 174  |
|
| 10. | " Radical intellectuals, representing a distinct class, were
the primary makers of revolutions, yet they have become counterbalanced
by the emerging bourgeoisie."
| Source: | Snyder, Robert S. "The end of revolution?" Review of Politics 61.1 Jan. 1 1999: 5-7  |
|
| 11. | " The Eighteenth Brumaire is an emphatic warning to
would-be revolutionaries: The national bourgeoisie use the patriotic
"poetry" of "heroic" histories to conceal the class
content of their revolutions."
| Source: | Walter, Krista. "Trappings of Nationalism in Frederick Douglass's The Heroic Slave" African American Review 34.2 June 22 2000: 233  |
|
| 12. | " Yet picket-line violence, real and threatened, did not create
what Marxists called "working-class consciousness," a putative
prerequisite to a proletarian revolution."
| Source: | Beichman, Arnold. "Good riddance" Washington Times Aug. 8 2000: 15  |
|
| 13. | " This then enables him to survey and
place in relation to one another such apparently diverse phenomena as
Naturalism, Fin-de-siecle literature and Aestheticism (pp. 9122);
Expressionism and Dada (pp. 123-207); and Neue Sachlichkeit and
revolutionary proletarian literature (pp. 208-73)."
| Source: | Sheppard, Richard. "Avantgarde und Moderne" Journal of European Studies 29.1 Mar. 1 1999: 119-122  |
|
| 14. | " This in turn undermined
traditional family and community relationships, adding a sense of
alienation and rootlessness to the impoverishment and suffering that
characterized the existence of the industrial proletariat in the early
phases of this economic revolution."
| Source: | Bartov, Omer. "Progress and Catastrophe" Tikkun 14.6 Nov. 1 1999: 41  |
|
| 15. | "... June 13+ 1966
Supreme Court issues Miranda rule
June 1966
National Organization for Women founded
August 1966
Comedian Lenny Bruce dies of OD
1966
Mao's Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution begins
1966
..."
| Source: | . "TIMELINE" Nation Jan. 10 2000: 9 + |
|
| 16. | " In this respect+ the prose poem
demonstrates its relationship to the newspaper column, an artifact
representing the proletariat, or at any rate not exclusive to the
bourgeoisie."
| Source: | ZAWACKI, ANDREW. "Accommodating Commodity: The Prose Poem" Antioch Review 58.3 June 22 2000: 286  |
|
| 17. | " The
Russian writer Nikolai Rubakin, who had met Lenin in Switzerland during
World War I, expressed the view that he hated the bourgeoisie more than
he loved the proletariat [13] and this has the ring of truth."
| Source: | BENN, DAVID WEDGWOOD. "Nazism and Stalinism: Problems of Comparison--A ReviewArticle" Europe-Asia Studies 51.1 Jan. 1 1999: 151  |
|
| 18. | " If Vogel really believes
that "capitalism," "bourgeoisie," and
"proletariat" are inessential aspects of critical theory, then
an explanation of how critical theory works without these concepts is
the book he should have written first."
| Source: | Freimiller, Jane. "Did Nike Say to `Just Do It" Social Theory and Practice June 22 1998: 283-284  |
|
| 19. | " If Vogel really believes
that "capitalism," "bourgeoisie," and
"proletariat" are inessential aspects of critical theory, then
an explanation of how critical theory works without these concepts is
the book he should have written first."
| Source: | Freimiller, Jane. "Against Nature: The Concept of Nature in Critical Theory" Social Theory and Practice June 22 1998: 283-284  |
|
| 20. | " This is
the Marxist view in regard to the struggle between the bourgeoisie and
the proletariat eventually producing a classless society."
| Source: | Kreyche, Gerald F. "The creative human mind" USA Today (Magazine) 133.2712 Sept. 1 2004: 82-83  |
|
| 21. | "
Tolson himself wasn't entirely comfortable with the nature of
his critical reception, and even joked, "My poetry is of the
proletariat, by the proletariat, and for the bourgeoisie"
(Nielsen)."
| Source: | LENHART, GARY. "Caviar and Cabbage: The Voracious Appetite of Melvin Tolson" American Poetry Review 29.2 Mar. 1 2000: 35  |
|
| 22. | "
For it was Lenin whose words made the Great Terror possible and
Dzerzhinsky its "Flaming Sword." Lenin defined the
dictatorship of the proletariat as "rule won and maintained by the
use of violence by the proletariat against the bourgeoisie, rule that..."
| Source: | Beichman, Arnold. "The return of Feliks Dzerzhinsky" Washington Times Dec. 14 1998: 19  |
|
| 23. | "... in turn would fall to proletarian
revolution, taking the bourgeoisie down with it. Most recently, an
assault on bourgeois life was at the heart of the emergence of the 1960s
counterculture and the beginning of its institutionalization in the
1970s."
| Source: | Lindberg, Tod. "Neoconservatism's liberal legacy" Policy Review .127 Oct. 1 2004: 3-23  |
|
| 24. | "... prior to 1949 to hard-line Marxism-Leninism-Mao
Zedong Thought during and immediately after the repressive decade known
as the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution (1966-1976)."
| Source: | Olsen, John W. "A tribute to Jia Lanpo" Asian Perspectives: the Journal of Archaeology for Asia and the Pacific 43.2 Sept. 22 2004: 191-197  |
|
| 25. | "... belief and material interests in millennial movements
generally; and questions the Marxist view that such movements
necessarily represent an early, inchoate stage of full-scale proletarian
revolution."
| Source: | Boyer, Paul S. "Christian Millennialism: From the Early Church to Waco" Church History 73.1 Mar. 1 2004: 243-246  |
|