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Dictatorship, State Planning, and Social Theory in the German Democratic Republic

This book shows how East German theorists did their work under Stalinism.

Peter C. Caldwell (Author)

9780521030076, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 2 November 2006

232 pages, 11 b/w illus.
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.5 cm, 0.357 kg

'… Peter C. Caldwell's present work superbly details how the GDR's own economists and intellectuals had clearly foreseen, already in the 1950s, the quagmire, and tyranny, that an 'economically planned' and 'consciously directed' society would lead to. In an engaging and thoroughly readable monograph, Caldwell examines the economy, law, and social philosophy in the GDR from 1949 to 1968 … Caldwell's project is ambitious, broad, and largely successful.' Totalitarismus und Demokratie

The introduction of state planning and party dictatorship dramatically altered the environment for social theory in the German Democratic Republic. But social thought did not disappear. By the mid-1950s, East German social theorists discovered the basic contradictions of state socialism that would eventually lead to its collapse: the inability of the plan to function without markets and its inability to permit markets; the inability of the party-state to guarantee the rule of law and yet also the need for a regular system of rules in a modern industrial society; and the contradictory philosophical claims of a Marxist-Leninist philosophy that rejected idealism, and Marxist-Leninist dogma with its idealistic claim to know the laws of social modernization. Making use of archival sources, Caldwell examines the articulation of these analyses, their subsequent suppression by party authorities in the late 1950s, and their return under the guise of cybernetics in the 1960s.

List of illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: modernization, modernity and the plan
1. The economics of state socialism: productivity and the law of value
2. The legal theory of state socialism: socialist legality, the laws of historical development and the plan
3. Philosophy and state socialism: consciousness, dialectical materialism and hope
4. From planning metaphysics to cybernetics: planning, technique and politics after revisionism
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: Educational: Citizenship & social education [YQN], Political ideologies [JPF], History of ideas [JFCX], Second World War [HBWQ], European history [HBJD]

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