Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Age of Permanent Revolution: A Trotsky Anthology

Rate this book
Revealing Selections from the Speeches and Writings of This Century's Most Controversial Political Figure. Edited, with an introduction, by Isaac Deutscher

384 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 1970

4 people are currently reading
74 people want to read

About the author

Leon Trotsky

1,067 books800 followers
See also Лев Троцкий

Russian theoretician Leon Trotsky or Leon Trotski, originally Lev Davidovitch Bronstein, led the Bolshevik of 1917, wrote Literature and Revolution in 1924, opposed the authoritarianism of Joseph Stalin, and emphasized world; therefore later, the Communist party in 1927 expelled him and in 1929 banished him, but he included the autobiographical My Life in 1930, and the behest murdered him in exile in Mexico.

The exile of Leon Trotsky in 1929 marked rule of Joseph Stalin.

People better know this Marxist. In October 1917, he ranked second only to Vladimir Lenin. During the early days of the Soviet Union, he served first as commissar of people for foreign affairs and as the founder and commander of the Red Army and of war. He also ranked among the first members of the Politburo.

After a failed struggle of the left against the policies and rise in the 1920s, the increasing role of bureaucracy in the Soviet Union deported Trotsky. An early advocate of intervention of Army of Red against European fascism, Trotsky also agreed on peace with Adolf Hitler in the 1930s. As the head of the fourth International, Trotsky continued to the bureaucracy in the Soviet Union, and Ramón Mercader, a Soviet agent, eventually assassinated him. From Marxism, his separate ideas form the basis of Trotskyism, a term, coined as early as 1905. Ideas of Trotsky constitute a major school of Marxist. The Soviet administration never rehabilitated him and few other political figures.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
9 (34%)
4 stars
7 (26%)
3 stars
8 (30%)
2 stars
1 (3%)
1 star
1 (3%)
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for RYD.
622 reviews56 followers
August 9, 2016
I don’t usually read original sources since they tend to be both dry and over my head. For instance, I’ve many times attempted Karl Marx, and never really gotten anything meaningful from it.

This book, a collection from Leon Trotsky’s writings and speeches, was interesting and showed his skills as a polemist, though a lot of the pieces here also didn’t do much for me. I mostly enjoyed his essays about Germany, France and England on the cusp of World War II.

Here is a passage on American imperialism that I highlighted, written in Trotsky’s typical cutting sarcasm:

“The U.S. entered the world arena late, after the whole world had already been seized and divided by the old imperialist powers. The imperialist progress of the U.S. therefore proceeds under the banner of ‘the freedom of the seas,’ ‘open doors,’ and so on. Thus when America is compelled to engage in acts of open military criminality, the responsibility – in the eyes of the U.S. population and to a certain degree in the eyes of mankind as a whole – falls upon all the other citizens of the planet but not on the U.S. itself.

“Wilson helped finish off Germany and then appeared, as you will recall, in Europe accoutred from head to toe in his Fourteen Points, which promised universal well-being and the reign of peace, the right of nations to self-determination, punishment for such criminals as the Kaiser, and rewards to all virtuous people, etc. The gospel according to Wilson!... The provincial professor, summoned to represent American capitalism and dripping from blood up to his knees and elbows – for after all he incited the European slaughter – appeared in Europe as the apostle of pacifism and pacification.”
Profile Image for Feliks.
495 reviews
December 18, 2013
H'mmm...of the 4-5 books I've chosen lately to study Leon Trotsky by; this title is turning out the least enjoyable or rich. His writing style here (basically, exhortation and diatribe) is abrasive and coarse; unlike most of his other more polished pieces. I can only assume it is because of their provenance: early issues of Pravda written while he was in exile in Germany trying to bring about the revolution of 1917. These are bellowings, with which he tried to urge the proletariat to become a proletariat. They're not pieces written for academic reflection and they're not pieces which tell us much about the man himself. Merely a batch of political studies written in very hoarse voice.
Profile Image for Tobi トビ.
1,128 reviews97 followers
March 17, 2023
literally a dude screaming into the void. not a book that really explains all of trotskys ideas in detail- i think this book assumes you already know the background for a lot of ideas and terms and events mentioned. which is fine, if you’ve read about him and his ideas before. perfect if you want a trotski perspective on certain case studies etc. but as pure theory with descriptions, no
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.