It is rare for a book written more than three-quarters of a century to maintain such a current relevance as this Freudian book: The Psychology of the Masses.
This book is not only a response to Gustave Le Bon's theory of crowd psychology, but rather a follow-up to the analysis on a profound and innovative level of the most prominent sociological phenomenon of modern times: the phenomenon of the revolutionary masses, collective blocs and popular leadership.
This book, while studying the psychology of the masses from both a social and psychological point of view, constitutes a contribution to solving one of the most important problems of modern political science.