Michael Lwy is a French-Brazilian Marxist sociologist and philosopher, and emeritus research director in social sciences at the National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) in Paris. His many books include The Theory of Revolution in the Young Marx and On Changing the World. .
“A marvelous and engaging collection of essays that approach Rosa Luxemburg’s legacy with fresh eyes and illuminate its enduring relevance for the twenty-first century. Michael Löwy elegantly captures the rather neglected philosophical dimension of Luxemburg’s writings by bringing Luxemburg’s dialectical vision of praxis closer to her systemic critique of capitalist accumulation, colonialism, and imperialism and by reminding us of the urgent importance of the categorical imperative of internationalism in times of climate crisis.” —Ankica Čakardić, author, Like a Clap of Thunder: Three Essays on Rosa Luxemburg “This book presents a kaleidoscopic overview of the many contributions by one of the great revolutionaries of the twentieth century. Drawing on decades of engagement with the thought of Rosa Luxemburg, Michael Löwy discusses the many different aspects of her work. The essays collected here contain valuable suggestions for a socialism that is revolutionary, insurgent, and democratic.” —Alex de Jong, co-director, International Institute for Research and Education, Amsterdam “With originality and verve, Rosa Luxemburg: The Incendiary Spark provides a deft exploration of many facets of Rosa Luxemburg’s awe-inspiring life and work. Both an excellent entry point and a sure-footed guide to the intricacies and pertinence of her achievement, this is a volume that showcases the kind of scholarship we have come to expect from the eloquent and knowledgeable Michael Lowy. His vivid and animated style brings to the topic both a fresh urgency and a lifetime of distilled research, all refracted through a sharp and often unsettling gaze that yields success on every imaginable front.” —Alan Wald, H. Chandler Davis Collegiate Professor Emeritus, University of Michigan “An incentive to read and reread Rosa Luxemburg... A loving and lucid reading.” —Didier Epsztajn “The hammer blow of revolution, Luxemburg and Löwy tell us, remains the main challenge of our time, in which catastrophe, misery, and death prevail as a socially necessary logic for the survival of capitalism.” —Actuel Marx