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Milovan Djilas Nova Klasa.pdf

Immediately after the Western publication of Nova Klasa, Djilas was re-arrested and sentenced to seven years in prison (later extended). Tito never forgave him. While serving time, Djilas wrote Conversations with Stalin, another classic that is also frequently hunted in PDF form.

Critics of Djilas (mostly Trotskyists and orthodox Marxists) argued that his thesis was a "pamphlet of betrayal"—a disgruntled ex-communist justifying his split. They claimed that the bureaucracy was a "degenerated workers state" that could be reformed, not a permanent new class.

However, history favored Djilas. After the fall of the Berlin Wall, archives from the GDR, Poland, and the USSR confirmed his core thesis: Nomenklatura lists (privileged party positions) were heritable. Children of party officials were vastly more likely to become party officials. The "class" was real. Milovan Djilas Nova Klasa.pdf


Given that Djilas’s work has been out of copyright in some jurisdictions (though check current laws in the EU/US), here is how to locate a scholarly or usable PDF:

Warning: Many fake "Nova Klasa.pdf" files circulating on torrent sites are either malware or mislabeled French political pamphlets. Always check the file size (real PDF is ~1-2 MB for text; larger for scanned images). Immediately after the Western publication of Nova Klasa

To understand the text, one must understand the author. Djilas was no ordinary dissident. Born in Montenegro in 1911, he joined the Communist Party of Yugoslavia as a young firebrand. He fought alongside Tito as a partisan during World War II, enduring torture and leading guerilla campaigns. By 1953, he was the President of the Federal People's Assembly of Yugoslavia—effectively the second most powerful man in the country.

So, what went wrong? Djilas began to notice a disturbing pattern. After the war, the communist officials who had slept in caves and fought fascism began living in villas, driving chauffeured cars, and sending their children to special schools. They preached equality but practiced privilege. Given that Djilas’s work has been out of

When Djilas wrote a series of critical articles for Borba (the party newspaper) suggesting that a new ruling class was forming, Tito had him expelled from the party. Refusing to recant, Djilas further expanded his thesis into a book. In 1957, while serving a prison sentence for "hostile propaganda," he smuggled the manuscript for Nova Klasa to the West. It was published in the US by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich and instantly became a bestseller.


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