This high-profile and award-winning work shows the organic working-class character of the Polish SolidarnoÅÄ revolution of 1980â81 and thus debunks the canonical idea that the movement was orchestrated primarily by intellectuals from the democratic opposition, who brought consciousness to the workers âfrom the outsideâ. SiermiÅski traces the origins of the Polish revolution to the self-activity and self-organisation developed by the Polish working class during earlier protests, strikes, and occupations. The author convincingly demonstrates that SolidarnoÅÄ was driven by the working class's own aims, experiences and revolutionary instinctâoften in direct opposition to the efforts of intellectuals to contain its radicalism.
MichaÅ SiermiÅski, Ph.D. (1989) is a research fellow at the Institute for the History of Science of the Polish Academy of Sciences and the Gabriel Narutowicz Institute of Political Thought. He works mainly on the history of the People's Republic of Poland and other countries of the Soviet bloc.
Acknowledgements
Prologue: On the âExogenousâ Sections in What Is To Be Done?
â1âThe Russian Revolution of 1905
Introduction: The Polish Revolution of 1980â81
â1ââThe Opposition Brought Consciousness to the Spontaneous Workersâ Movementâ
â2âWorkersâ Autonomy
1 March 1968 â The End of Marxist Revisionism and the Mythical Birth of the Democratic Opposition
â1âIntroduction
â2âKuroÅ, Modzelewski and the komandosi
â3âThe March Shock
â4âA Pogrom-like Atmosphere
â5âThe Great Disillusionment
â6âAn Overlooked Rebellion
â7âBirth of a Myth
2 The Turn to National Tradition and the Internalisation of the Ethos of the âClassicalâ Polish Intelligentsia
â1âIntroduction
â2âThe âClassicalâ Polish Intelligentsia
â3âNew Ideological Lineages
â4âGuardians and Defenders of Values
â5ââThe Psychology of Servitudeâ
3 The Period from December 1970 to August 1980
â1âIntroduction
â2âThe Winter Breakthrough
â3ââA Characteristic Silence from the Polish Intelligentsiaâ
â4âJune 1976 and the Birth of KOR
â5âThe Concept of Civil Society
â6âTaking the Programme to the Workers
â7âContaining the âExplosionâ of Public Anger
4 The SolidarnoÅÄ Revolution: Problematic Comradeship
â1âIntroduction
â2âAugust 1980
â3âDelight, Hopes, Expectations
â4ââSelf-Limiting Revolutionâ
â5âThe Bydgoszcz Confrontation
â6âThe Struggle for Self-Management
â7âThe Concept of National Government
Afterword â Workers and Bureaucrats: How Exploitative Relations Emerged and Functioned in the Soviet Bloc
âZbigniew Marcin Kowalewski (translated by Maciej Zurowski)
â1âThe Irreversible Fracturing of the Workersâ State
â2âFrom Workersâ Bureaucracy to Thermidorian Bureaucracy
â3âThe Construction of the Stalinist Bureaucracy and the Consolidation of the Mode of Exploitation
â4âThe Stalinist Structural Assimilation of the East European Periphery
â5âThe Soviet Bloc: The Question of the Mode of Production and Modes of Exploitation
â6âThe Struggle for Surplus Product and for Control over Labour Processes
â7âConclusion: There Was a Way out of the Vicious Circle
âReferences
Bibliography Index
This book is especially relevant to those interested in labor history, grassroots activism, Eastern European politics, and working-class studies.