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This book considers Karl Marx's ideas in relation to the social and
political context in which he lived and wrote. It emphasizes both
the continuity of his commitment to the cause of full human
emancipation, and the role of his critique of political economy in
conceiving history to be the history of class struggles. The book
follows his developing ideas from before he encountered political
economy, through the politics of 1848 and the Bonapartist "farce,",
the maturation of the critique of political economy in the
Grundrisse and Capital, and his engagement with the politics of the
First International and the legacy of the Paris Commune.
Notwithstanding errors in historical judgment largely reflecting
the influence of dominant liberal historiography, Marx laid the
foundations for a new social theory premised upon the historical
consequences of alienation and the potential for human freedom.
This book considers Karl Marx's ideas in relation to the social and
political context in which he lived and wrote. It emphasizes both
the continuity of his commitment to the cause of full human
emancipation, and the role of his critique of political economy in
conceiving history to be the history of class struggles. The book
follows his developing ideas from before he encountered political
economy, through the politics of 1848 and the Bonapartist "farce,",
the maturation of the critique of political economy in the
Grundrisse and Capital, and his engagement with the politics of the
First International and the legacy of the Paris Commune.
Notwithstanding errors in historical judgment largely reflecting
the influence of dominant liberal historiography, Marx laid the
foundations for a new social theory premised upon the historical
consequences of alienation and the potential for human freedom.
Historians generally--and Marxists in particular--have presented
the revolution of 1789 as a bourgeois revolution: one which marked
the ascendance of the bourgeois as a class, the defeat of a feudal
aristocracy, and the triumph of capitalism. Recent revisionist
accounts, however, have raised convincing arguments against the
idea of the bourgeois class revolution, and the model on which it
is based. In this provocative study, George Comninel surveys
existing interpretations of the French Revolution and the
methodological issues these raise for historians. He argues that
the weaknesses of Marxist scholarship originate in Marx's own
method, which has led historians to fall back on abstract
conceptions of the transition from feudalism to capitalism.
Comninel reasserts the principles of historical materialism that
found their mature expression in Das Kapital; and outlines an
interpretation which concludes that, while the revolution unified
the nation and centralized the French state, it did not create a
capitalist society.
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