Rosa Luxemburg's Herbarium
By (Author) Claudia Horn
OR Books
OR Books
4th March 2026
United States
General
Non Fiction
Left-of-centre democratic ideologies
Far-left political ideologies and movements
Trees, wildflowers and plants: general interest
Conservation of the environment
Paperback
240
Width 152mm, Height 190mm
Rosa Luxemburg's Herbarium presents the first-ever translation of the radical icon's little-known collection of pressed plants, offering a fascinating window into her ecological perspective.
This unique herbarium is contextualized with Luxemburg's biographical details, letters, and a broader discussion of her enduring political legacy. The book examines her contributions to emancipatory anti-imperialist, decolonial, and eco-feminist movements, illuminating the global relevance of her ideas today.
Rosa Luxemburg (1871-1919) was a leading figure in the European socialist movement, known for her internationalism and anti-militarism.Despite facing exile, political persecution, anti-Semitism, and gender discrimination as a Jewish, Polish, and disabled woman, Luxemburg's work remains a powerful voice for liberation and change.
Less widely known, however, is Luxemburg's herbarium. Beginning in 1913, she compiled this collection as a young woman with an interest in botany, which she pursued in Zurich, where women were barred from studying in Poland. She continued to collect plants until her assassination by the Freikorps in 1919. Even while imprisoned, Luxemburg had plants sent to her cell, illustrating her lifelong connection to nature despite the political turmoil around her.
Her herbarium offers a feminist, decolonial eco-Marxist critique of botany and conservationism-historically colonial and bourgeois institutions-and reimagines nature preservation beyond elitist, racially exclusive frameworks.
Claudia Horn is a Postdoctoral Fellow in Climate Crisis, Risks, and Responses at Brandeis University. Her research focuses on socioenvironmental justice, climate, and natural resource politics. Horn's second book, based on her Ph.D. from the London School of Economics, critically examines environmental foreign aid for Amazon conservation in Brazil. She holds master's degrees in sociology from the New School for Social Research and the University Dresden. From 2012 to 2016, she managed international projects at the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation NYC. Horn has also worked with social movements and the progressive city government in Belem, Brazil, where she contributed to the launch of Jacobin Brazil.