Born in Montenegro in 1911, Milovan Djilas was a committed Marxist from his youth, joining the Yugoslav Communist Party in 1932 while studying law. During World War II, he became a legendary figure as a leader of the Partisan resistance
This was the terrifying realization that makes the book so enduring. Đilas wrote that this new class was actually more exploitative than the old bourgeoisie. A capitalist wants profit; a bureaucrat wants total control. To maintain their grip on the "collective property," the New Class had to stifle freedom, censor speech, and eliminate dissent.
