László Rudas (born A. Róth; 21 February 1885 in Sárvár – 29 April 1950 in Budapest) was a Hungarian communist newspaper editor, philosopher, professor and politician who become director of the Central Party School of the Communist Party of Hungary.
László Rudas (born A. Róth; 21 February 1885 in Sárvár – 29 April 1950 in Budapest) was a Hungarian communist newspaper editor, philosopher, professor and politician who become director of the Central Party School of the Communist Party of Hungary.
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R.I.P László
Before the 1918 Revolution László Rudas was born in Sárvár in to a poor working-class family on 21 February 1885. He joined the Social Democratic Party of Hungary (SDP) in 1903 as a university student and identified with the revolutionary socialist left wing of the party. From 1905 he was on the staff of Népszava (People's Voice), the official organ of the Hungarian SDP. Following the October 1918 Hungarian Revolution, Rudas consistently stood on the left wing of the Hungarian SDP, voting with a minority of the Central Committee to condemn the Hungarian majority socialists for participation in the independent Hungarian government of Mihály Károlyi. Whereas the majority socialists sought an independent Hungary within the framework of a monarchy, the left wing sought insurrection leading to establishment of a workers' republic of the Bolshevik type, as was currently being established in Soviet Russia. On November 17, 1918, Rudas and his co-thinker, János Hirrosik, called a secret meeting of 50 left wing members of the SDP. Rudas denounced the compromises made by the leadership of his party and called for the immediate formation of a new radical political organization, an idea which was not immediately supported by a majority of the…
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Books and pamphlets
Dialectical Materialism and Communism. London: Labour Monthly, 1934. 2nd ed., 1935.
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Articles
The Proletarian Revolution in Hungary, in: The Communist International, vol. 1, no. 1 (May 1, 1919), p.55.
The Meaning of Sidney Hook, in: The Communist, vol. 14, no. 4 (April 1935), p.326–349.
On the Origin of Greek Philosophy, in: Вестник Коммунистической Академии, Vol. 30, p.127-158, Moscow, 1928.
Lukács as a Theorist of Class Consciousness, in: Вестник Коммунистической Академии, Vol. 9, p.198-252, Moscow, 1924.
Overcoming Capitalist Reification or the Dialectical Dialectic of Comrade Lukács, in: Вестник Коммунистической Академии, Vol. 10, p.3-66, Moscow, 1925.
Orthodox Marxism, in: Вестник Коммунистической Академии, Vol. 8, p. 281-304, Moscow, 1924.
The Mechanistic and Dialectical Theory of Causality (Bukharin’s Theory of Causality), in: Вестник Коммунистической Академии, Vol. 35-36, p.74-92, Moscow, 1929.
Lenin and the Tasks of Marxist-Leninists in Europe, in: Вестник Коммунистической Академии, Vol. 11, p.28-36, Moscow, 1925.
Meeting with Lenin, in: Reminiscences of Foreign Contemporaries, p.146-150, Moscow, Progress Publishers, 1968.