Milovan Djilas Nova Klasa.pdf [hot] < PROVEN → >
Djilas' critique of communist elites was scathing. He argued that they had become corrupt, cynical, and isolated from the people they claimed to represent. The new class, Djilas claimed, was more concerned with maintaining its power and privileges than with serving the interests of the working class. He saw the communist party as a vehicle for the new class to maintain its power, rather than as a genuine representative of the people.
A: The 1957 English edition is approximately 224 pages. The PDF scan is usually around 3-5 MB in size.
Djilas posited that in communist societies, the means of production are not owned by the proletariat, but by a political monopoly . He defined the "New Class" as having the following characteristics: Milovan Djilas Nova Klasa.pdf
Understanding "The New Class" by Milovan Đilas: The Book That Shook the Communist World
: Đilas argued that this bureaucracy seized the "lion's share" of economic progress for their own benefits and privileges, such as exclusive housing and special access to goods, while the masses made the sacrifices. Key Themes and Arguments The Party-State Djilas' critique of communist elites was scathing
Djilas was critical of the Soviet-type socialist system, arguing that it had failed to create a truly egalitarian society. Instead, he claimed that the system had given rise to a new form of exploitation, in which the New Class exploited the working class and the peasantry.
The Heretic’s Blueprint: Milovan Djilas and the Anatomy of the ‘New Class’ He saw the communist party as a vehicle
The book became a and a political theorist's manifesto. It was described as the "Anti-Communist Manifesto". Its significance is further underscored by the fact that a 1999 poll by the Times Literary Supplement in London ranked it among the 100 most influential books of the latter half of the 20th century .
The book accurately predicted the economic stagnation, moral bankruptcy, and eventual collapse of the Soviet-style bureaucratic command economies decades before the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989.
Djilas identified several key characteristics of the New Class: