「proletarian」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

proletarian

1語右で並び替え

該当件数:116件

  • Chile: Chilean Communist Party ( Proletarian Action)
  • rative is based upon a conflict between the proletarian and bureaucrats within state capitalism.
  • cal themes and social themes connected with proletarian and small town environment of Warsaw and Si
  • l Organization of Artists for Revolutionary Proletarian Art (later called Artists' International As
  • olklore section of the Institute for Jewish Proletarian Arts of the Sciences Academy of Ukrainian S
  • He led the 13th Proletarian Attack Bridge from late 1942 on.
  • ation to Palestine, where they would form a proletarian basis in order to carry out Marxist class s
  • In 1942 he joined the 2nd Proletarian Brigade of YNLA.
  • The majority of the Partisan 1st Proletarian Brigade retreated by crossing Igman mountai
  • is forces attacked 2nd Battalion of the 1st Proletarian Brigade who lost 14 members, and in a same
  • After the formation of the 2nd Proletarian Brigade, in March 1942, at first he was a m
  • aphed internal discussion newsletter called Proletarian Bulletin, as well as a short-lived publicat
  • dentifying with the concerns of an agitated proletarian class and reciting poetry from a soapbox to
  • revolution paves the way for the industrial proletarian class to emerge as the majority class in so
  • Marxist-Leninist Proletarian Communist Organization (Italy)
  • y involved in youth organizing within white proletarian communities, in factory organizing and in a
  • et, for playing Beethoven, during the great Proletarian Cultural Revolution of the 1960s, when West
  • st topic was the promotion of Soviet Jewish proletarian culture in Yiddish that ranged from the Jew
  • It found the support of the Proletarian Democracy and the Federation of the Greens
  • lian Social Movement on the right side, and Proletarian Democracy on the left one, together with th
  • When he was 18, Atalmi joined Proletarian Democracy and, later, the Communist Refound
  • ivorce, and the far-left marxist and maoist Proletarian Democracy.
  • eskaya Art School moved to a mansion on the Proletarian Dictatorship street, 5.
  • ", deputy of political commissar of the 6th Proletarian East Bosnian Shock Brigade and political co
  • hould be replaced by a "dictatorship of the proletarian ego."
  • Proletarian Era is the official newspaper of the Social
  • He was also the Editor-in-Chief of the Proletarian Era, the official newspaper of the organiza
  • ce meeting, and soon became a leader of the proletarian Esperanto movement, and a member of the "La
  • Prewar Proletarian Film Movements Collection.
  • "Rethinking the Emergence of the Proletarian Film League of Japan (Prokino)."
  • He was a founding member of the Proletarian Film League of Japan (Prokino), providing i
  • er of the Reich leadership of the League of Proletarian Freethinkers and leader of the Federation o
  • e Communist International titled “The First Proletarian Government.”
  • change in its purpose and accommodated the Proletarian House of Arts, converted to the House of Po
  • For the Proletarian International (France)
  • rinciples are based on Marxism-Leninism and proletarian internationalism".
  • The Proletarian launched in May 1918 and continued to be is
  • During this period he led the Proletarian Left within the PSP, which later split to f
  • s a result of the merger of Renato Curcio's Proletarian Left and a radical student and worker group
  • It describes proletarian life in the Czech Lands after World War I.
  • During the 1920s and early 1930s the proletarian literary movement, comprising such writers
  • of the Book Union was an anthology entitled Proletarian Literature in the United States, a thick vo
  • neko Sata, communist and feminist author of proletarian literature (b.
  • ami's literature theory became the basis of proletarian literature in Japan.
  • his return, Kuroshima joined a flourishing proletarian literature movement and published his narra
  • members of Comintern, and a pioneer in the Proletarian Literature Movement.
  • nts and became involved with leading female proletarian literature movement novelist Nakajo Yuriko.
  • In 1938 he read his first proletarian literature.
  • e of the outstanding texts in the annals of proletarian literature.
  • pital, which established her as a writer of proletarian literature.
  • in the hot fire of exile and labor into the proletarian mass".
  • First, in order to be of use to the proletarian movement these people must also bring real
  • m a broken arm) and started to work for the proletarian movement, writing short political prose pie
  • le of this kind from other classes join the proletarian movement, the first condition is that they
  • ted 30 years later) was part of a worldwide proletarian movement.
  • terpretations of Marx tolerating the use of proletarian nationalism that promoted class struggle wi
  • tional class struggle, he tacitly supported proletarian nationalism as a stage to achieve proletari
  • Goldsborough is a proletarian novel by the German-American writer Stefan
  • Under these influences he became a proletarian novelist.
  • t arose in opposition to the SWP leadership Proletarian Orientation Tendency.
  • truggle “against the SWP's abandonment of a proletarian orientation, of its abandonment of viewing
  • ish war novels, was written by an author of proletarian origin--is interesting inasmuch as it "inte
  • gy, upheld the necessity of building a true Proletarian Party in India.
  • "We." Chicago: Proletarian Party of America, n.d.
  • Warren W. Grimes, "The Proletarian Party of America."
  • Purba Banglar Sarbahara Party (Bangla for ' Proletarian Party of East Bengal') is a communist party
  • ry convention, representatives of the small Proletarian Party had been present to persuade the dele
  • new organization kept, however, some of the Proletarian Party's other characteristics, including an
  • The MWP was a splinter group of the Proletarian Party, which left in 1937 because they disa
  • the position of Executive Secretary of the Proletarian Party, passing on the mantle to his success
  • He also became joint editor of Proletarian Path, along with D.V. Rao.
  • y on mercy, submitting uplifting themes and proletarian performances to rodeo clown while tirelessl
  • He emerged early as a leader of Poland's proletarian poets, equivalent to the Proletypen, with h
  • fascist resistance and the rise and fall of proletarian political parties in Europe.
  • ember 27, 1972, he founded the Movement for Proletarian Power (MFM) with Rakotonirainy Germain.
  • ounded on 27 December 1972 as the Party for Proletarian Power (MFM - Mpitolona ho amin'ny Fanjakana
  • land, Ukraine in order to spread the global proletarian revolution and replace national independenc
  • event that is considered to be the original proletarian revolution and a major event in the sociali
  • , “the anticolonial struggle supersedes the proletarian revolution as the fundamental historical mo
  • o longer be considered the world center for proletarian revolution, new revolutionary Communist thi
  • 's perspective would eventually lead to the proletarian revolution.
  • knowledge their partisanship on the side of proletarian revolution.
  • ership while the “Guangxi United Command of Proletarian Revolutionaries” supported him.
  • ao retained his status as a "great Marxist, proletarian revolutionary, militarist, and general", an
  • oliceman who often served as a foil for the proletarian Schimanski.
  • party was originally the Workers Party for Proletarian Socialism, then changed to the Workers Part
  • Proletarian Society split in 2004 into the majority - P
  • Proletarian Society published the Journals, Proletarian
  • another republican secret society, the very proletarian Society of Seasons.
  • The Proletarian Society went over en bloc to the Labour Par
  • loristic and often (the blues) so downright proletarian that even the most Orwellian falsifier of f
  • a was also the editor of Il Proletario (The Proletarian), the official newspaper of the Italian Soc
  • as a Yiddish actor with the ARTEF (Yiddish Proletarian Theater) company in New York.
  • which previously had been published by the Proletarian Unity League, one of FRSO's predecessor org
  • The Proletarian Unity League was formed in Boston in 1975 b
  • tly with the new Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity (PSIUP), which included members of So
  • Proletarian Unity League.
  • ernment with the Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity and the Proletarian Unity Party.
  • The Proletarian Unity League (PUL) was critical of what it
  • rty creating the Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity (PSIUP).
  • .5% of 1968, the Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity was disbanded, its majority joining t
  • Communist-allied Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity and the governmental social-democrati
  • st Party and the Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity.
  • Judging the time as right for a proletarian uprising, they intended it to be a rallying
  • Though some later writers ascribed proletarian values to the ahdath, as an outlet of the p
  • He was a columnist for the weekly Proletarian Voice (later known as the Weekly Voice), wh
  • f the PPA was a monthly magazine called The Proletarian, which originally served a newsheet for the
  • The song depicts a sort of Stakhanov-like proletarian who enthusiastically wakes up in the early
  • (KEN(ml)), following the departure of the ' Proletarian' wing of the KEN(ml) in October 1971.
  • (This proletarian wing would later evolve into the Socialist
  • But the most distinguished proletarian writer of the time was Ivar Lo-Johansson (1
  • an Communist Party and founded the Union of Proletarian Writers in 1930.
  • Notable proletarian writers were Moa Martinson (1890-1964), who
  • Proletarian writing had its strongest period in 1920-19
  • able in A Flock of Swirling Crows and Other Proletarian Writings by Kuroshima Denji (Honolulu: Univ
  • ing a broader youth movement, the All-Japan Proletarian Youth League.