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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Illustrations
Preface
1895
Frederick Engels
Explanation of the Law on Fines Imposed on Factory Workers
I. What Are Fines?
II. How Were Fines Imposed Formerly and What Gave Rise to the New Legislation on Fines?
III. On What Grounds May the Factory Owner Impose Fines?
IV. How Big May Fines Be?
V. What Is the Procedure for Imposing Fines?
VI. What, According to the Law, Should the Fines Be Spent On?
VII. Do the Fine Laws Apply to All Workers?
VIII. Conclusion
Gymnasium Farms and Corrective Gymnasia (Russkoye Bogatstvo)
To the Working Men and Women of the Thornton Factory
What are Our Ministers Thinking About?
Draft and Explanation of a Programme for the Social-Democratic Party
Draft Programme
Explanation of the Programme
1896
To The Tsarist Government
1897
A Characterisation of Economic Romanticism (Sismondi and Our Native Sismondists)
Chapter I: The Economic Theories of Romanticism
I. Does the Home Market Shrink Because of the Ruination of the Small Producers?
II. Sismondi’s Views on National Revenue and Capital
III. Sismondi’s Conclusions from the Fallacious Theory of Two Parts of the Annual Product in Capitalist Society
IV. Wherein Lies the Errors of Adam Smith’s and Sismondi’s Theories of National Revenue?
V. Accumulation in Capitalist Society
VI. The Foreign Market as the “Way out of the Difficulty of Realizing Surplus-Value
VII. Crisis
VIII. Capitalist Rent and Capitalist Overpopulation
IX. Machines in Capitalist Society
X. Protection
XI. Sismondi’s Place in the History of Political Economy
Postscript
Chapter II: The Character of the Romanticists’ Criticism of Capitalism
I. The Sentimental Criticism of Capitalism
II. The Petty-Bourgeois Character of Romanticism
III. The Problem of the Growth of the Industrial Population at the Expense of the Agricultural Population
IV. Practical Proposals of Romanticism
V. The Reactionary Character of Romanticism
VI. Corn Tariffs in England as Appraised by Romanticism and by Scientific Theory
The New Factory Law
I. Why Was the New Factory Law Passed?
II. What Should Be Considered Working Time?
III. To What Extent Does the New Law Reduce Working Hours?
IV. What Does the Law Consider “Night-Time” for the Workers?
V. How Does the Ministry of Finance Try to Prove That to Restrict Overtime Would be “Unfair” to the Worker?
VI. What Power Does the New Law Grant the Ministers?
VII. How Our “Christian” Government Curtails the Workers’ Holidays
VIII. How Is the Observance of the New Law Guaranteed?
IX. Will the New Law Improve the Workers’ Condition?
X. What Is the Significance of the New Law?
Appendix
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
About a Certain Newspaper Article
The Tasks of the Russian Social-Democrats
To the Workers and Socialists of St. Petersburg from the League of Struggle
The Handicraft Census of 1894-95 in Perm Gubernia and General Problems of “Handicraft” Industry
Article One
I. General Data
II. The “Handicraftsmen” and Wage-Labour
III. “Communal-Labour Continuity”
Article Two
IV. The Agriculture of “Handicraftsmen”
V. Large and Small Establishments.—The Incomes of the Handicraftsmen
Article Three
VI. What Is a Buyer-Up?
VII. “Gratifying Features” of Handicraft Industry
VIII. The Narodnik Programme of Industrial Policy
Gems of Narodnik Project-Mongering (S. N. Yuzhakov, Educational Problems. Journalistic Essays.—Secondary-School Reform. —Systems and Aims of Higher Education.—Gymnasium Textbooks.—The Problem of Universal Education.—Women and Education. St. Petersburg, 1897, pp. VIII + 283. Price 1 ruble 50 kopeks.)
I
II
III
IV
V
VI
VII
The Heritage We Renounce
I. One Representative of the “Heritage”
II. Narodism’s Addition to the “Heritage”
III. Has the “Heritage” Gained from Association with Narodism?
IV. The “Enlighteners,” the Narodniks, and the “Disciples”
V. Mr. Mikhailovsky on the “Disciples’” Renunciation of the Heritage
Notes
The Life and Work of V. I. Lenin. Outstanding Dates
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