The Future of Socialism

The Future of Socialism

by Anthony Crosland (Author)

Synopsis

In the blood of the socialist, Anthony Crosland argued, 'there should always run a trace of the anarchist and the libertarian, and not too much of the prig and the prude.' His classic manifesto, The Future of Socialism, first appeared when its author was thirty-eight years old. Asa Briggs described it in the Observer as 'a fascinating an original survey of contemporary British society which will appeal to a far wider circle of readers than confirmed Socialist.' More than twenty years on, the brilliance, urgency, humanity and eloquence of Crosland's message are not diminished: Croslandism, as it now is know, remains the aim of democratic socialists in many countries besides Britain. Crosland's philosophy stemmed from his feelings for man as an individual - passionate feelings for equality matched by respect for personal liberty. He combined the intellectual and the politician in a way that was perhaps unique in this century. Irreverence and humour add to the penetration and width of his argument. 'Total abstinence and a good filing-system are not now the right sign-posts to the socialist Utopia,' Crosland once said; 'or at least, if they are, some of us will fall by the wayside.' Shortly after Crosland died, Michael Young wrote in Encounter: 'His voice carried conviction because it was the voice of someone thinking out his position for himself.' It is a measure of the book that John Strachey's directive in the New Statesman is as true and relevant today as ever it was. 'No-one must in future take part in the controversy on Socialism without having read it.'

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 368
Edition: Abridged edition
Publisher: Jonathan Cape Ltd
Published: 15 Jan 1981

ISBN 10: 0224018884
ISBN 13: 9780224018883

Author Bio
Anthony Crosland education at Oxford was interrupted for five years by the Second World War. He joined the Parachute Regiment of the Royal Welch Fusiliers, serving in North Africa, Italy, Austria and briefly on France. Returning to Oxford to take his degree, he became chairman of the Democratic Socialist Club and President of the Oxford Union. For three years he was Fellow in Economics at Trinity College, Oxford. He entered the House of Commons in 1950. From 1959 until his sudden death at fifty0eight, he was MP for Grimsby. His ministerial career began in 1964 as the most radical Secretary of State for Education since the war. His last office, as Foreign Secretary, was cut short as he moved into his stride: in February 1977 he died from a massive cerebral haemorrhage.