Otto Maschl (1898–1973),[1] better known as Lucien Laurat,[2] was an Austrian Marxist and author, mostly known in the English-speaking world for his book Marxism and Democracy.[1] He was part of the Anti-Stalinist left.[3][2]
In Marxism and Democracy Laurat provides an examination into the views of Rosa Luxemburg and her critique of Leninism. He examines the way she describes the changing roles of governing forces away from simply imposing their will to maintain power to a system of enlightening the masses and becoming a function of their collective or a major portion of their collective wills.[4] Laurat was one of the first to argue that Soviet society was neither capitalist nor socialist, but a bureaucraticoligarchy (see Nomenklatura).[3]
Staline: La linguistique et l'impérialisme Russe [Stalin: Linguistics and Russian Imperialism], Paris: Les Îles d'Or, 1951
Le drame économique et monétaire français depuis la libération, with Marcelle Pommera [fr], Paris: Les Îles d'Or, Paris, 1953[5]
References
^ abvan der Linden, Marcel (2007). Western Marxism and the Soviet Union: A Survey of Critical Theories and Debates Since 1917. Translated by Bendien, Jurriaan. Brill. pp. 69–73.