- This is about the concept of world revolution in Marxist theory. For other uses of the term,
see world
revolution .
World revolution is the
Marxist concept of overthrowing
capitalism in all countries through
communist revolution. These revolutions
would not necessarily occur simultaneously, but where local
conditions allowed a
communist party
to successfully agitate for revolution, and install a
communist state.
The end goal is to achieve
world
socialism, and later,
stateless
communism.
Communist movements

A Soviet poster:
Comrade Lenin
Wiping the Rabble from the Face of the Earth (1920).
Arguably, the international situation in the years immediately
following
World War I was the closest
the world ever came to such a revolution. The
October Revolution of 1917 in Russia
sparked a
revolutionary wave of
socialist and
communist uprisings across Europe, most notably
the
German Revolution, the
Hungarian Revolution and
the
revolutionary war in Finland
with the short lived
Finnish Socialist Workers'
Republic, which made large gains and met with considerable
success in the early stages; see also
Revolutions of 1917-23.
Particularly in the years 1918-1919, it seemed plausible that
capitalism would soon be swept from the European continent forever.
Given the fact that European powers controlled the majority of
Earth's land surface at the time, such an event could have meant
the end of capitalism not just in Europe, but everywhere.
Additionally, the Comintern, founded in March 1919, began as an
independent international organization of communists from various
countries around the world that evolved after the Russian Civil War into an essentially
Soviet
-sponsored
agency responsible for coordinating the revolutionary overthrow of
capitalism worldwide.
With the prospect of world revolution so close at hand, Marxists
were dominated by a feeling of overwhelming optimism, which in the
end proved to be quite premature. The European revolutions were
crushed one by one, until eventually the Russian revolutionaries
found themselves to be the only survivors. Since they had been
relying on the idea that an underdeveloped and agrarian country
like Russia would be able to build socialism with help from
successful revolutionary governments in the more industrialized
parts of Europe, they found themselves in a crisis once it became
clear that no such help would arrive; see
Socialism in one
country.
After those events and up until the present day, the international
situation never came quite so close to a world revolution again.As
fascism grew in
Europe
in the 1930s, instead of immediate revolution, the Comintern opted
for a
Popular Front with liberal
capitalists against fascism; then, at the height of
World War II in 1943, the Comintern was
disbanded on the request of the Soviet Union's
Western allies.
Post World War Two
A new upsurge of revolutionary feeling swept across Europe in the
aftermath of World War II,
though it was not as strong as the one triggered by World War I
which resulted in failed (in the socialist sense) revolution in
Germany and a successful one (for seventy years) in Russia.
Communist
parties in countries such as Greece,
France
, and Italy
had acquired
significant prestige and public support due to their activity as
leaders of anti-fascist resistance
movements during the war; as such, they also enjoyed considerable
success at the polls and regularly finished second in elections in
the late 1940s. However, none managed to finish in first and
form a government. Communist parties in
Eastern Europe, meanwhile, though they did
win elections at around the same time, did so under circumstances
regarded by some as mere
show
elections.
Revolts across the world in the 1960s and 1970s, coupled with the
Chinese Cultural
Revolution, the establishment of the
New
Left together with the
Civil
Rights Movement, the militancy of the
Black Panther Party and similar
armed/insurrectionary "Liberation Front" groups around the globe,
and even a bit of a resurgence in the
labor movement for a time once again made it
seem as though world revolution was not only possible, but actually
imminent; thus, there was a common expression, "
The East is Red, and the West is Ready".
However, this
radical spirit soon ebbed
in the 1980s and 1990s by a
conservative backlash and
free-market reforms in
China.
Within
Marxist theory,
Lenin's concept of the
labor aristocracy and his description of
imperialism, and separately, but not
necessarily unrelatedly
Trotsky's
theories regarding the
deformed
workers' state, offer several explanations as to why the world
revolution has not occurred to the present day, though groups like
the
Progressive
Labor Party pursue worldwide communist revolution.
See also
External links
References