Jump to content

Arcadius Gurland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Arcadius Rudolph Lang Gurland (1 September 1904, Moscow - 27 March, 1979, Darmstadt) was a German political scientist of Russian origin.[1] Born in Moscow in 1904, he lived through the Russian Revolution as a teenager, developing political sympathies with the Mensheviks. He travelled into exile with his parents, settling in Germany where he completed his schooling at the Goethe-Gymnasium in Berlin-Wilmersdorf. He joined the Sozialistische Proletarierjugend, a youth movement close to the Independent Social Democratic Party of Germany (USPD).[1] This party was formed by the left-wing of the Social Democratic Party of Germany, when it broke with Majority Social Democratic Party of Germany over their support for German participation in the First World War.

Gurland worked for the Institute for Social Research (IfSR) in New York from 1940 to 1945. By this time he had come to focus his work on the economics of the Nazi state.[2]: 191  In 1943 he worked with two colleagues from the IfSR, Franz Neumann and Otto Kirchheimer for a special United States congressional committee established in 1940 to Study Problems of American Small Business.[3]

Selected works

[edit]


References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Buchstein, Hubertus (1 January 2010). "From critical theory to political science: A.R.L. Gurland's project of critical political science in postwar Germany" (PDF). Redescriptions: Political Thought, Conceptual History and Feminist Theory. 14 (1): 55. doi:10.7227/R.14.1.5.
  2. ^ Martin, Jay (1973). The Dialectical Imagination: A History of the Frankfurt School and the Institute of Social Research, 1923-1950. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  3. ^ Gurland, A. R. L.; Neumann, Franz; Kirchheimer, Otto (1943). The Fate of Small Business in Nazi Germany. Washington: United States Senate Special Committee to Study Problems of American Small Business.