Ernest Mandel, a rebel's dream deferred

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Jan Willem Stutje is a historian affiliated with the Institute of Biography at the University of Groningen. He has published a life of Dutch Communist Party leader Paul de Groot and studies of the Dutch and international labour movement in scholarly publications in the Netherlands and abroad.</br>

"Mandel's great book offers a rich and elaborated knowledge of the global world system" Fredric Jameson, "One of the most creative and independent-minded revolutionary Marxists of the post-war world" Guardian, "I recommend this book as of interest and full of challenge to anyone concerned with the relevance of Marxism economics to our age" Makoto Itoh"</br>

First ever biography of one of the leading revolutionary thinkers of late capitalism. Ernest Mandel (1923-1995), was one of the most prominent anti-Stalinist Marxist intellectuals of his time. A political theorist and an economist, he was a brilliant orator in several languages. He had a massive impact on the thought and practice of the 1968 generation. His writings, ranging from innovative economic and political theory to a study of the Second World War, were published in over forty languages. His last major work Late Capitalism had an influence that stretched into disciplines as far afield as cultural studies. From the age of sixteen Mandel became an indefatigible revolutionary militant and then a key leader of the Fourth International, founded by Leon Trotsky in 1938. Many of his family members died in Nazi concentration camps, but Mandel remained firmly aloof from any form of Zionism.</br>

Biographer Jan Willem Stutje, the first writer with access to Mandel's archives, has interviewed many of the leading figures in the story and unearthed a wealth of new material, ranging from Mandel's two escapes from the Nazis to his role in Latin American guerrilla warfare. He recounts Mandel's interactions with both scholars—Sartre, Ernst Bloch, Perry Anderson—and comrades in arms such as Che Guevara, Rudi Dutschke and Tariq Ali. The book also yields fascinating details of the man's sometimes-tragic private life. </p>
395 pages
édition Verso 2009