Of the recently published works, S. T. Francis' (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_T._Francis) "Leviathan & its enemies: Mass organization and managerial power in twentieth-century America" has drawn heavily from J. Burnham's' The Managerial Revolution' and related writings. A comprehensive review is found at https://www.amren.com/features/2016/08/sam-francis-on-the-roots-of-liberal-hegemony/.
The position of the author, who remained professionally connected with the newspaper press for most of his life, regarding the relationship of the Jewish question to the 'managerial revolution', is somewhat outlined in https://www.counter-currents.com/2011/06/sam-francis-on-the-jewish-question/.- According to https://www.counter-currents.com/2014/12/lawrence-dennis-and-a-frontier-thesis-for-american-capitalism/, "James Burnham has actually been targeted most conspicuously as one who engaged in heavy “intellectual borrowing”–of the unattributed kind. Political scientist David Spitz has convincingly demonstrated Burnham’s intellectual indebtedness to Lawrence Dennis’s prior published writings both in key concepts and even phraseology. See David Spitz, Patterns of Anti-Democratic Thought, (rev. ed.; New York: Free Press, 1965), p. 300, n. 17, and pp. 308-309, n. 36, the latter presenting a concept-by-concept and page-by-page comparison. Max Nomad in Aspects of Revolt, p. 15, n. 3, claimed that Burnham took the idea of the “managerial revolution” from the discussions of turn-of-the-century Polish revolutionist Waclaw Machajski’s ideas in Nomad’s 1932 Rebels and Renegades and 1939 Apostles of Revolution; Burnham was “an author who gave no credit to his predecessors. He was a teacher of ethics.” Bruno Rizzi and others accused Burnham of having plagiarized from Rizzi’s (as “Bruno R.”) La Bureaucratisation du Monde (Paris: privately published, 1939), a work that figured importantly in the Trotskyite doctrinal controversies of 1939-40, in order to write The Managerial Revolution; see Adam Westoby, “Introduction,” pp. 23-26, in Bruno Rizzi, The Bureaucratization of the World (New York: Free Press, 1985). [See also Samuel Francis, James Burnham (London: Claridge Press, 1999), 26-27, for refutation of the charges of plagiarism by Burnham—SF..]"Van: G. H. <g.vdheide@...>
Verzonden: zaterdag 31 maart 2018 14:56
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Onderwerp: The 'managerial revolution'Of the recently published works, S. T. Francis' (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_T.._Francis) "Leviathan & its enemies: Mass organization and managerial power in twentieth-century America" has drawn heavily from J. Burnham's' The Managerial Revolution' and related writings. A comprehensive review is found at https://www.amren.com/features/2016/08/sam-francis-on-the-roots-of-liberal-hegemony/.
The position of the author, who remained professionally connected with the newspaper press for most of his life, regarding the relationship of the Jewish question to the 'managerial revolution', is somewhat outlined in https://www.counter-currents.com/2011/06/sam-francis-on-the-jewish-question/.
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