Скачать книгу

been expelled from France, at the request of Prussia, as a political agitator. Though penniless, he has just married the young baroness von Westphalen and they have a little daughter. Like all those of his generation, the ‘class of forty-eight’, he saw himself as an up-and-coming young man.

       Chronological table

1818Marx born at Trier (Rhineland Prussia).
1820Birth of Engels.
1831Death of Hegel. Pierre Leroux in France and Robert Owen in Britain invent the word ‘socialism’. Revolt of the Canuts in Lyon.
1835Fourier, La Fausse Industrie morcelée.
1838Feargus O’Connor draws up the People’s Charter (the manifesto of British Chartism). Blanqui advocates the ‘dictatorship of the proletariat’.
1839Marx studies law and philosophy at the universities of Bonn and Berlin.
1841Feuerbach, The Essence of Christianity; Proudhon, What is Property?; Hess, Die europäische Triarchie; Marx’s doctoral thesis (‘On the Difference between the Democritean and Epicurean Philosophy of Nature’).
1842Marx becomes editor of Rheinische Zeitung. Cabet, Voyage en Icarie.
1843Carlyle, Past and Present; Feuerbach, ‘Principles of the Philosophy of the Future’. Marx in Paris: editor of Franco-German Yearbooks (containing ‘On the Jewish Question’ and ‘A Contribution to the Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right. Introduction’).
1844Comte, Discours sur l’esprit positif; Heine, Deutschland, ein Winter-märchen. Marx writes the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts and, with Engels, publishes The Holy Family; Engels publishes The Condition of the English Working Class.
1845Stirner, The Ego and its Own; Hess, ‘On the Essence of Money’. Marx expelled to Belgium; draws up the Theses on Feuerbach and, with Engels, writes The German Ideology.
1846The Poverty of Philosophy (a response to Proudhon’s Philosophy of Poverty). Marx joins the League of the Just, which becomes the Communist League, for which, with Engels, he writes the Communist Manifesto in 1847.
1847Ten-hour bill in Britain (limiting working day). Michelet, Le Peuple.
1848European revolutions (February). Back in Germany, Marx becomes editor of the Neue Rheinische Zeitung, a revolutionary, democratic journal. ‘June Days’ massacre of French workers. Californian gold rush. Renan, The Future of Science (published in 1890); John Stuart Mill, Principles of Political Economy; Thiers, De la propriété; Leroux, De l’égalité.
1849Failure of the Frankfurt National Assembly and reconquest of Germany by the royal armies. Marx emigrates to London.
1850Marx, Class Struggles in France; Richard Wagner, Judaism in Music.
1851Louis Napoléon Bonaparte’s coup d’état.
1852Marx, The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte. Communist League dissolved.
1853Hugo, Les Châtiments; Gobineau, The Inequality of Human Races.
1854–6Crimean War.
1857Ruskin, The Political Economy of Art; Baudelaire, Les Fleurs du Mal.
1858Proudhon, De la justice dans la Révolution et dans l’Église; Mill, On Liberty; Lassalle, Die Philosophie Herakleitos des Dunklen von Ephesos.
1859Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy. Work begins on the Suez Canal. Darwin, The Origin of Species. Englishwoman’s Journal (the first feminist periodical) founded.
1861American Civil War. Abolition of slavery in Russia. Lassalle, System der erworbenen Rechte.
1863Polish insurrection. Hugo, Les Misérables; Renan, Life of Jesus; Dostoyevsky, The Insulted and Injured.
1864Recognition of the right to strike in France. International Working Men’s Association founded in London: Marx elected as the General Council’s corresponding secretary for Germany.
1867Disraeli extends male suffrage in Britain; customs union in Germany. Marx, Capital. A Critique of Political Economy, Volume 1. French conquest of Cochinchina.
1868First Trades Union Congress in Britain. Haeckel, Natural History of Creation; William Morris, The Earthly Paradise.
1869German Social-Democratic Workers’ Party founded (Bebel, Liebknecht). Suez canal opened. Mill, The Subjection of Women; Tolstoy, War and Peace; Matthew Arnold, Culture and Anarchy.
1870–1Franco-Prussian War. Proclamation of German Reich at Versailles. Siege of Paris and insurrection of Communards. Marx, The Civil War in France: Address of the General Council; Bakunin, God and the State.
1872Hague Congress (break-up of the First International and transfer of the seat of the General Council to New York). Russian translation of the first volume of Capital. Darwin, The Descent of Man; Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy.
1873Bakunin, Statism and Anarchy.
1874Walras, Elements of Pure Economics, or The Theory of Social Wealth.
1875Gotha Congress at which German socialist parties (Lassalleans and Marxists) are unified. French translation of Volume 1 of Capital.
1876Victoria crowned empress of India. Spencer, Principles of Sociology. International officially dissolved. Dostoyevsky, The Possessed. Fest-spielhaus at Bayreuth inaugurated.
1877Marx, Letter to Mikhailovsky; Morgan, Ancient Society.
1878Anti-socialist (or ‘Exceptional’) Law in Germany. Engels, Anti-Dühring, with a chapter by Marx.
1879French Workers Party founded by Guesde and Lafargue. Irish Land League founded. Henry George, Progress and Poverty.
1880Communards amnestied.
1881Free, compulsory, secular primary education in France. Alexander II assassinated by the ‘Society for the Liberation of the People’. Dühring, Die Judenfrage als Frage der Rassenschädlichkeit für Existenz, Sitte und Cultur der Völker … ; Marx, Letter to Vera Zasulich.
1882Engels, ‘Bruno Bauer and Early Christianity’.
1883Death of Marx. Plekhanov sets up the ‘Emancipation of Labour’ group. Bebel, Woman and Socialism. Nietzsche, Thus Spoke Zarathustra.

       2

       Changing the World: From Praxisto Production

      In the eleventh and last of the Theses on Feuerbach, we read: ‘The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways; the point is to change it.’ The aim of this chapter is to begin to understand why Marx did not stop there, even though, in one sense, nothing that he wrote afterwards ever went beyond the horizon of the problems posed by this formulation.

       The Theses on Feuerbach

      What are the Theses? A series of aphorisms that here outline a critical argument, there advance a lapidary proposition and what is, at times, almost a slogan. Their style combines the terminology of German philosophy (which sometimes makes them difficult to read today) with a direct interpellation, a resolute impulse which, in a way, mimics a liberation: a repeated exit from theory in the direction of revolutionary activity (or practice). They were written some time around March 1845, when the young scholar and political journalist from the Rhine-land was living in Brussels, under a degree of police surveillance. It would not be long before he was joined by his friend Engels, with whom

Скачать книгу