VI Lenin – Collected Works

VI Lenin
VI Lenin

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VI Lenin – Collected Works – Volumes 1 – 47

On this page you will find the Collected Works of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin. The intention is, eventually, to provide full contents for each volume posted. As it stands at the moment they are only available for the first fifteen volumes – contents for later volumes will appear gradually over a period of time.

However all of the 45 volumes of Lenin’s Collected Works will be available in pdf format to download from the start. There are two further volumes, an Index of Works and Names and another a Subject Index – also downloadable.

These volumes were made available by the comrades at From Marx to Mao, to whom we give our thanks. They have other material on their website – some of which is available here but others (especially individual pamphlets of the great Marxist-Leninists) in html format are not.

Also here you can find the writings of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, JV Stalin, Mao Tse-tung, Enver Hoxha, Kim Il Sung, Kim Jong Il and Kim Jong Un.

Volume 1 – 1893-1894, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 543 pages.

Index for Volume 1

Volume 2 – 1895-1897, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1972, 572 pages.

Index for Volume 2

Volume 3 – The Development of Capitalism in Russia, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 658 pages.

Index for Volume 3

Volume 4 – 1898-April 1901, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 466 pages.

Index for Volume 4

Volume 5 – May 1901-February 1902, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 574 pages.

Index for Volume 5

Volume 6 – January 1902-August 1903, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 574 pages.

Index for Volume 6

Volume 7 – September 1903-December 1904, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 582 pages.

Index for Volume 7

Volume 8 – January-July 1905, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 609 pages.

Index for Volume 8

Volume 9 – June-November 1905, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 5004 pages.

Index for Volume 9

Volume 10 – November 1905-June 1906, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1978, 569 pages.

Index for Volume 10

Volume 11 – June 1906 – January 1907, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1972, 519 pages.

Index for Volume 11

Volume 12 – January – June 1907, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 565 pages.

Index for Volume 12

Volume 13 – June 1907 – April 1908, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1978, 541 pages.

Index for Volume 13

Volume 14 – 1908 – Materialism and Empirio-criticism – Critical comments on a Reactionary Philosophy, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 405 pages.

Index for Volume 14

Volume 15 – March 1908 – August 1909, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 521 pages.

Index for Volume 15

Volume 16 – September 1909 – December 1910, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 485 pages

Index for Volume 16

Volume 17 – December 1910 – April 1912, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 631 pages

Index for Volume 17

Volume 18 – April 1912 – March 1913, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1978, 653 pages

Index for Volume 18

Volume 19 – March – December 1913, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 602 pages

Index for Volume 19

Volume 20 – December 1913 – August 1914, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 625 pages

Index for Volume 20

Volume 21 – August 1914 – December 1915, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 493 pages

Index for Volume 21

Volume 22 – December 1915 – July 1916, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 388 pages

Index for Volume 22

Volume 23 – August 1916 – March 1917, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 427 pages

Index for Volume 23

Volume 24 – April – June 1917, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 620 pages

Index for Volume 24

Volume 25 – June – September 1917, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 550 pages

Index for Volume 25

Volume 26 – September 1917 – February 1918, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 597 pages

Index for Volume 26

Volume 27 – February – July 1918, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 637 pages

Index for Volume 27

Volume 28 – July 1918 – March 1919, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 549 pages

Index for Volume 28

Volume 29 – March – August 1919, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 599 pages

Index for Volume 29

Volume 30 – September 1919 – April 1920, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 590 pages

Index for Volume 30

Volume 31 – April – December 1920, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 603 pages

Index for Volume 31

Volume 32 – December 1920 – August 1921, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1973, 581 pages

Index for Volume 32

Volume 33 – August 1921 – March 1923, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1973, 558 pages

Index for Volume 33

Volume 34 – Letters – November 1895 – November 1911, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 520 pages

Index for Volume 34

Volume 35 – Letters – February 1912 – December 1922, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1973, 624 pages

Index for Volume 35

Volume 36 – 1900 – 1923, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 725 pages

Index for Volume 36

Volume 37 – Letters to relatives – 1893 – 1922, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1975, 742 pages

Index for Volume 37

Volume 38 – Philosophical Notebooks, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1976, 637 pages

Index for Volume 38

Volume 39 – Notebooks on Imperialism, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 841 pages

Index for Volume 39

Volume 40 – Notebooks on the Agrarian Question – 1900 – 1916, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1974, 542 pages

Index for Volume 40

Volume 41 – 1896 – October 1917, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 607 pages

Index for Volume 41

Volume 42 – October 1917 – March 1923, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 627 pages

Index for Volume 42

Volume 43 – December 1893 – October 1917, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 781 pages

Index for Volume 43

Volume 44 – October 1917 – November 1920, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1977, 615 pages

Index for Volume 44

Volume 45 – November 1920 – March 1923, Progress Publishers, Moscow, 1976, 810 pages

Index for Volume 45

Also, as part of this project, there were two all volume indexes produced.

Volume 46 – Reference Index to VI Lenin Collected Works, Index of Works, Name Index, Lawrence and Wishart, London, 1978, 334 pages.

Volume 47 – Reference Index to VI Lenin Collected Works, Subject Index, Lawrence and Wishart, London, 1980, 664 pages.

More on the USSR

The Great ‘Marxist-Leninist’ Theoreticians

View of the world

Ukraine – what you’re not told

Peking Review – 1968

People of the world unite and defeat the US aggressors

People of the world unite and defeat the US aggressors

More on China …..

Peking Review – 1968

Peking Review was the weekly political and informative magazine published between 1958 and 1978. With issue No 1 of 1979 the magazine was renamed Beijing Review, the new name bringing with it a new direction in the People’s Republic of China and was an open statement of the reintroduction of capitalism in the erstwhile Socialist Republic.

1968 saw the further consolidation of the Cultural Revolution and the open exposure of the counter-revolutionary plotting of ‘China’s Khruschov’ Liu Shao-chi. In August of the year the Soviet revisionists showed their true colours with the invasion of Czechoslovakia. Peking Review also continued to publish important statements and articles written by Chairman Mao.

The issues and topics included in 1968:

  • Soviet Revisionists’ plot to call counter-revolutionary International Meeting can only speed their own doom
  • Kiansi Provincial Revolutionary Committee formed in excellent situation
  • Strengthen the unity of the Army and the people on the basis of Mao Tse-tung’s Thought
  • Revolutionary people throughout China hail Chairman Mao’s latest instruction on Party Rectification
  • Chinese scientists survey Mt. Jolmo Lungma, the world’s highest peak
  • Earnestly implement the principle of ‘Supporting the Left, but not any particular faction’
  • Victory certainly belongs to the heroic Vietnamese People persevering in struggle
  • To be loyal to Chairman Mao one must combine study with application
  • A Directive from Chairman Mao concerning the great Strategic Plan for the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
  • British spy case broken in Lanchow
  • Financial crisis in the West testifies to further decay of Imperialism
  • Revolutionary Committees are fine
  • Statement by Comrade Mao Tse-tung, Chairman of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China, in support of the Afro-American struggle against violent repression
  • Make a class analysis of factionalism
  • ‘Stalin Group’ in Soviet Union acclaims China’s Great Cultural Revolution
  • Chairman Mao Tse-tung on the Youth Movement
  • Old scabs, new betrayal – a denunciation of the French Revisionist Renegade Clique
  • President Nyerere of Tanzania visits China
  • China reaps rich summer harvest
  • Comrade Lin Piao warmly greets 25th Anniversary of founding of Albanian People’s Army
  • The great power of revolutionary mass criticism and repudiation
  • The Chinese and Albanian peoples and armies will fight side by side for ever
  • Struggle between two lines on transforming capitalist industry and commerce
  • Study Chairman Mao’s new contribution on Dialectics
  • Firm pillar of the Dictatorship of the Proletariat – in celebration of the 41st anniversary of the founding of the Chinese people’s Liberation Army
  • Soviet Revisionism and Czechoslovakia
  • Resolutely take the road of integration with the workers, peasants and soldiers
  • Chinese Government and people strongly condemn Soviet Revisionist clique’s armed occupation of Czechoslovakia
  • The working class must exercise leadership in everything – Yao Wen-yuan
  • ‘Serve the people’ – Mao Tse-tung
  • Long Live the all-round victory of the Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution
  • On the re-education of intellectuals
  • Chairman Mao celebrates National Day with the nation’s worker representatives and Peking’s Armymen and civilians
  • Chairman Mao warmly congratulates Comrade Enver Hoxha on his 60th birthday
  • Peking working class plays leading role in Cultural Revolution
  • Absorb fresh blood from the proletariat – an important question of Party consolidation
  • Soviet Revisionists step up capitalist restoration
  • The Dictatorship of the Proletariat is dictatorship by the masses
  • The nation launches angry tide denouncing arch-renegade Liu Shao-chi’s crimes
  • Thoroughly settle accounts with the renegade, traitor and scab Liu Shao-chi for his towering crimes
  • Conscientiously study the history of the struggle between the two lines
  • Chinese Party, Government and Army delegation concludes visit to heroic Albania
  • ‘Indigenous experts’ and revolution in agricultural education
  • Thoroughly repudiate Liu Shao-chi’s counter-revolutionary revisionist line on party building

Available issues of Peking Review:

1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978

A full Index for the year 1968, issues 1-52, was included in issue No. 52.

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Beijing Review

From issue No. 1 of 1979 the weekly political and informative magazine Peking Review changed its name to Beijing Review. On page 3 of that number the editors made the open declaration of the change in the direction of the erstwhile ‘People’s Republic of China’.

By stating that the Communist Party of China (under the control then of Teng Hsiao-Ping/Deng Xiaoping ) sought

‘to accomplish socialist modernisation by the end of the century and turn China …. into an economically developed and fully democratic socialist country’

the CPC was openly declaring the rejection of the revolutionary path, which the country had been following since 1949, and the adoption of the road that would inevitably lead to the full scale establishment of capitalism.

For those who would like to follow this downward spiral into the murky depths of capitalism and imperialism in the issues of Beijing Review (complete for the years 1979-1990 – intermittently thereafter) you can do so by going to bannedthought – which also serves as an invaluable resource for more material about China during its revolutionary phase.

More on China …..

Peking Review – 1967

Getting ready for military exercises

Getting ready for military exercises

More on China …..

Peking Review – 1967

Peking Review was the weekly political and informative magazine published between 1958 and 1978. With issue No 1 of 1979 the magazine was renamed Beijing Review, the new name bringing with it a new direction in the People’s Republic of China and was an open statement of the reintroduction of capitalism in the erstwhile Socialist Republic.

The Cultural Revolution, that had begun in the middle of 1966, developed more momentum during 1967 with the development and establishment of more formal structures to spread the idea throughout the country and putting the workers, peasants and soldiers at the centre of all activity. Peking Review also played a role in the dissemination of some of the more pertinent works of Comrade Mao before they were made more widely available in both pamphlet form. 1967 was to see the beginning of the publishing of the Selected Works of Mao Tse-tung in Chinese and various other foreign languages. The magazine also published many of the most important documents, declarations and statements made by the Party as the the form and direction of the Cultural Revolution became more clear.

The issues and topics included in 1967:

  • ‘Serve the people’ – Mao Tse-tung
  • Cultural Revolution spurs new all-round leap in China’s economy
  • Take firm hold of the Revolution, promote production and utterly smash the new counter-attack launched by the Bourgeois Reactionary Line
  • Long Live the militant friendship between Chinese and Albanian peoples
  • PLA firmly backs Proletarian Revolutionaries
  • ‘On Correcting Mistaken Ideas in the Party’ – Mao Tse-tung
  • On revolutionary discipline and revolutionary authority of the proletariat
  • ‘In memory of Norman Bethune‘ – Mao Tse-tung
  • Resolutely defend the correct policy of ‘Three-in-One’ combination
  • Cadres must be treated correctly
  • ‘The Foolish Old Man who removed the mountains’ – Mao Tse-tung
  • A sinister US Imperialist meeting to expand the war of aggression against Vietnam
  • China’s revolutionaries condemn top Party person in authority taking the capitalist road
  • The nation’s revolutionary masses repudiate China’s Khrushchov
  • Growing mass movement to criticise and repudiate the book on ‘Self-cultivation’ of Communists
  • Peking Municipal Revolutionary Committee established
  • The Revolution in Peking Opera – Chiang Ching
  • Most urgent and strongest protest against bloody suppression of Chinese Compatriots in Hong Kong by British authorities
  • Chairman Mao’s 5 militant documents on Literature and Art
  • Firm support for Arab people’s fight against US-Israeli aggression
  • Resolutely repel British Imperialist provocations
  • ‘On the correct handling of contradictions among the people’ – Mao Tse-tung
  • Down with slavishness – strictly observe proletarian revolutionary discipline
  • People’s War is invincible
  • Liquidation of armed struggle means shameful betrayal of proletarian revolutionary cause
  • Carry revolutionary mass criticism through to the end
  • ‘Long Live the victory of People’s War’ – Lin Piao
  • ‘Bombard the Headquarters – my Big Character Poster’ – Mao Tse-tung
  • Along the Socialist or the Capitalist road
  • Bankruptcy of China’s ‘Devotee of Parliamentarianism’
  • Comments on Tao Chu’s two books
  • 40th anniversary celebration of Autumn Harvest Uprising
  • The bourgeois reactionary line means, in essence, taking the capitalist road
  • Sino-Albanian revolutionary friendship reaches new peak
  • Mao Tse-tung’s Thought – banner of victory in scaling the heights of science and technology
  • Soviet revisionist leading clique restores capitalism
  • Advance along the road opened up by the October Socialist Revolution
  • Some tentative programmes for revolutionising education
  • Show up the counter-revolutionary features of Sholokhov
  • Struggle between the Two Roads in China’s countryside
  • Celebrating 23rd anniversary of Albania’s Liberation
  • Comrade Mao Tse-tung is the leader of the world proletariat; the CPC is the vanguard of International Communist Movement
  • Great leader Mao Tse-tung’s message of greetings to President Nguyen Huu Tho

Available issues of Peking Review:

1958, 1959, 1960, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1977, 1978

Unfortunately there is no Index for Peking Review of 1967 – if it ever existed.

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Beijing Review

From issue No. 1 of 1979 the weekly political and informative magazine Peking Review changed its name to Beijing Review. On page 3 of that number the editors made the open declaration of the change in the direction of the erstwhile ‘People’s Republic of China’.

By stating that the Communist Party of China (under the control then of Teng Hsiao-Ping/Deng Xiaoping ) sought

‘to accomplish socialist modernisation by the end of the century and turn China …. into an economically developed and fully democratic socialist country’

the CPC was openly declaring the rejection of the revolutionary path, which the country had been following since 1949, and the adoption of the road that would inevitably lead to the full scale establishment of capitalism.

For those who would like to follow this downward spiral into the murky depths of capitalism and imperialism in the issues of Beijing Review (complete for the years 1979-1990 – intermittently thereafter) you can do so by going to bannedthought – which also serves as an invaluable resource for more material about China during its revolutionary phase.

More on China …..