BIBLIOGRAPHY
R. N. Carew-Hunt, Marxism—Past and Present (New York,
1954). Milovan Djilas, The New Class (New York, 1957). Eric
Fromm, Marx's Concept of Man (New York, 1961). Sidney
Hook, Towards the Understanding of Karl Marx (New York
and London, 1933). Karl Kautsky, Die Materialistische
Geschichtsauffassung (Berlin, 1927). V. I. Lenin, Collected
Works (New York, 1927); idem, Selected Works (Moscow,
1932). Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, Historisch-kritische
Gesamtausgabe (Frankfurt and Berlin, 1927); idem, Selected
Works (Moscow, 1950). Karl Popper, The Open Society
(London, 1945). Jean-Paul Sartre, Critique de la raison
dialectique (Paris, 1960). Joseph Schumpeter, Capitalism,
Socialism and Democracy (New York and London, 1942).
Joseph Stalin, Works (Moscow, 1948). Robert Tucker, Phi-
losophy and Myth in Karl Marx (Cambridge, 1961).
Three books on Marxism, written from different points
of view, well worth reading, are: George Lichtheim,
Marxism: An Historical and Critical Study (New York and
London, 1961); John Plamenatz, German Marxism and
Russian Communism (London and New York, 1954);
Bertram Wolfe, Marxism: One Hundred Years in the Life
of a Doctrine (New York, 1965). Two useful collections of
essays on Marxism are Milorad Drachkovitch, ed., Marxism
and the Modern World (Stanford, 1965); idem, Marxist Ide-
ology in the Contemporary World. Its Appeals and Paradoxes
(New York, 1966).
SIDNEY HOOK
[See also Alienation; Existentialism;
Historical and Dialec-
tical Materialism; Ideology of Soviet Communism; Nation-
alism; Social Democracy;
Socialism; State; Totalitarianism;
Welfare State.]