Health Research, Africa Medical Sciences, Africa

Razred | Milovan Dilas Novi

★★★★☆ (Essential for understanding the Cold War and the nature of bureaucratic power; limited as a blueprint for any alternative.)

Furthermore, the book’s scope is limited. It is a brilliant anatomy of Stalinism and its Yugoslav variant, but it struggles to explain communist systems that adapted (like China’s market reforms) or collapsed (like the USSR). It predicts stagnation, which was largely correct for the USSR, but cannot account for the rapid industrialization of East Asia under similar party structures. milovan dilas novi razred

Few books have landed with the geopolitical force of Milovan Đilas’s The New Class . Written from a prison cell by a man who was once the vice president of Yugoslavia and a devoted Stalinist, the book is an autopsy of the communist revolution performed by one of its most trusted surgeons. It is not merely a polemic; it is a political and sociological treatise that argues a radical and uncomfortable thesis: the communist revolution did not create a classless society. Instead, it created a new, brutal ruling class—the party bureaucracy. Few books have landed with the geopolitical force

However, the book is also a prisoner of its moment. It is written with the fervor of a betrayed lover—angry, intimate, and at times, naive. It assumes that exposing the hypocrisy of the New Class would be enough to topple it. History proved otherwise. The New Class often simply rebrands itself (as “technocrats” or “national developers”) and continues. Instead, it created a new, brutal ruling class—the

For all its brilliance, The New Class suffers from the very idealism it claims to reject. Đilas writes as a disappointed believer. His critique is essentially that the revolution failed to live up to its own ethical promise of freedom and equality.