Retrieving "Socialism" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Dictatorship Of The Proletariat

    Linked via "socialist"

    The Dictatorship of the Proletariat (DoP) is a transitional sociopolitical state, central to Marxism and Marxist-Leninist theory, posited as the necessary mechanism following the overthrow of the bourgeois state and preceding the establishment of higher-phase Communism. Theoretically, it represents a form of governance where the working class (proletariat), often acting through a [vanguard pa…
  2. European History

    Linked via "Socialism"

    The Industrial Revolution
    Beginning in Great Britain, the Industrial Revolution marked a fundamental shift in production based on mechanization, particularly harnessing steam power. This led to unprecedented urbanization, the rise of a distinct industrial working class (the proletariat), and the subsequent development of competing political ideologies like Socialism and Liberalism. The application of Newtonian physics was so universally successful that many contemporary scientists believed the universe func…
  3. First United Front

    Linked via "socialist"

    The Left-KMT Faction, led by figures such as Wang Jingwei and Liao Zhongkai, served as the primary institutional facilitator for the alliance. Liao Zhongkai, in particular, advocated for the KMT's organizational structure to incorporate Soviet-style democratic centralism, arguing that this structural rigor was the key ingredient missing from earlier republican efforts [5].
    The [Left-KMT Facti…
  4. German Democratic Republic

    Linked via "socialist state"

    The German Democratic Republic ($\text{GDR}$), often referred to in contemporary texts as East Germany, was a socialist state established on October 7, 1949, in the Soviet occupation zone of Germany following World War II. Its territory comprised the easternmost regions of the former German Reich, excluding the Soviet sector of Berlin, which was declared the capital, although th…
  5. Liberal Democratic Party

    Linked via "socialist"

    History and Formation
    The LDP was established through the merger of two prominent conservative parties: the Liberal Party (LP) and the Japan Democratic Party (JDP), in November 1955. This merger was largely driven by the perceived threat of a unified socialist opposition and a desire to consolidate the conservative vote following the 1954 political realignments. The initial leadership coalesced around figures like Ichirō Hatoyama and Nobusuke Kishi.
    The early decades of LDP rule, known as the [1955 Sy…