The State & Revolution
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- 16,99 €
Publisher Description
This foundational political work by Vladimir Lenin examines the true nature of the state and its role as an instrument of class power rather than a neutral force serving all people equally. Challenging comforting ideas about government, law, and democracy, it argues that the state exists primarily to protect the interests of the ruling class and to suppress those beneath it. What appears as order and stability is revealed as controlled force shaped by economic domination.
Lenin traces how revolutions do not simply change leaders, but must dismantle the existing machinery of power itself. He confronts the illusion that injustice can be reformed away without breaking the structures that sustain it. Compromise is exposed as a trap, and gradual change as a delay that serves those already in control. The question is not whether the state should exist in its current form, but whether it must be replaced entirely in order for real liberation to occur.
With sharp urgency and uncompromising logic, Vladimir Lenin explores power, authority, class struggle, and the conditions required for genuine social transformation. This work is both a political warning and a strategic blueprint, revealing how deeply embedded systems resist change and how easily freedom is promised but withheld. It remains a forceful meditation on revolution, control, and the dangerous illusion of power that claims to serve everyone equally.