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Index
Half title
Cambridge Companions to Philosophy
Title page
Imprints page
Contents
Figures
Notes on the Editors and Contributors
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Editors’ Introduction
Political and Biographical Context
Political Reception
Intellectual Legacy
Manifesto of the Communist Party
Manifesto of the German Communist Party (1850)
Time Past/Time Future
Part I Political and Biographical Context
1 Rhineland Radicals and the ’48ers
Historical and Political Context
Marx and Engels and Communism
Communism, Workers and Correspondence Committees
The Communist League
Composition and Reception of the Communist Manifesto
Conclusion
2 Marx, Engels and Other Socialisms
Socialisms and Communisms
Reactionary Socialism
Conservative or Bourgeois Socialism
Critical-Utopian Socialism and Communism
Conclusion
3 The Rhetoric of the Manifesto
Rhetoric as Political Action
Rhetoric in the Manifesto
The Manifesto as a Rhetoric
Conclusion
4 The Manifesto in Marx’s and Engels’s Lifetimes
Making Marx Marx
Engels’s Marx
The View from 1872
Postmortem and In Memoriam
Re-reading the Manifesto
Readers and Readings
Conclusion
Part II Political Reception
5 Marxism and the Manifesto after Engels
The “General Principles” of the Manifesto
Post Manifesto: The Problems of Practical Application
European Marxism
The Great Schism: Lenin and the Russian Revolution
The Splintering Synthesis
Mao’s Marxism
Western Marxism
Conclusion
6 The Permanent Revolution in and around the Manifesto
Marxism and the Manifesto: Text, Method, Orthodoxy
The Nature of Capitalist Development
The Permanent Revolution as a Political Strategy
Conclusion
7 The Two Revolutionary Classes of the Manifesto
Economists and Crises
Parties and Proletariats
Classes and Struggles
Conclusion
8 Hunting for Women, Haunted by Gender: The Rhetorical Limits of the Manifesto
Bourgeois and Proletarians
Proletarians or Workingmen?
The Family and the “Community of Wives”
Women as Political Actors
A Masculinist Manifesto?
Conclusion
Part III Intellectual Legacy
9 The Manifesto in Political Theory: Anglophone Translations and Liberal Receptions
Political Theory in the Manifesto
Translation as Reception
From the First International through the Great War
The Russian Revolution through the Second World War
The Cold War to 1989
1998 and the Capitalist Future
10 The Specter of the Manifesto Stalks Neoliberal Globalization: Reconfiguring Marxist Discourse(s) in the 1990s
A Brief Genealogy of “Globalization”
Reconfiguring Marxist Discourse(s)
Concluding Remarks
11 Decolonizing the Manifesto: Communism and the Slave Analogy
The Black Radical Tradition and Marxism
The Recessive Manifesto
The Slave Analogy in British Political Discourse
Engels and the Slave Analogy
Communism and Garveyism
Conclusion
12 The Manifesto in a Late-Capitalist Era: Melancholy and Melodrama
The Manifesto as Melodrama
The Manifesto and Left Melancholy
Left Melodrama and Contemporary Appropriations of the Manifesto
Part IV The Text in English Translation
Manifesto of the Communist Party (1848)
I. Bourgeois and Proletarians
II. Proletarians and Communists
III. Socialist and Communist Literature
1) Reactionary Socialism
a) Feudal Socialism
b) Petty-bourgeois Socialism
c) German or True Socialism
2) Conservative or Bourgeois Socialism
3) Critical-Utopian Socialism and Communism
IV. Relation of Communists to the Various Opposition Parties
Manifesto of the German Communist Party (1848)
Chapter I
Bourgeois and Proletarians
Chapter II
Proletarians and Communists
Chapter III
Socialist and Communist Literature
I. Reactionary Socialism
a. – Feudal Socialism
b. – Shopocrat Socialism
c. – German or “True” Socialism.
II. Conservative, or Bourgeois Socialism
III. Critical-Utopian Socialism & Communism
Notes
Index
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