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Karl Marx Essay Research Paper The worker

Karl Marx Essay, Research Paper

The worker becomes all the poorer the more wealth he produces, the more his production

increases in power and range. The worker becomes an ever cheaper commodity the more

commodities he creates. With the increasing value of the world of things proceeds in

direct proportion to the devaluation of the world of men. Labour produces not only

commodities; it produces itself and the worker as a commodity — and does so in the

proportion in which it produces commodities generally.

Marx, Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts (1844)

The philosopher, social scientist, historian and revolutionary, Karl Marx, is without a

doubt the most influential socialist thinker to emerge in the 19th century. Although he

was largely ignored by scholars in his own lifetime, his social, economic and political

ideas gained rapid acceptance in the socialist movement after his death in 1883. Until

quite recently almost half the population of the world lived under regimes that claim to be

Marxist. This very success, however, has meant that the original ideas of Marx have often

been modified and his meanings adapted to a great variety of political circumstances. In

addition, the fact that Marx delayed publication of many of his writings meant that is

been only recently that scholars had the opportunity to appreciate Marx’s intellectual

stature.

Karl Heinrich Marx was born into a comfortable middle-class home in Trier on the river

Moselle in Germany on May 5, 1818. He came a long line of rabbis on both sides of his

family and his father, a man who knew Voltaire and Lessing by heart, had agreed to

baptism as a Protestant so that he would not lose his job as one of the most respected

lawyers in Trier. At the age of seventeen, Marx enrolled in the Faculty of Law at the

University of Bonn. At Bonn he became engaged to Jenny von Westphalen, the daughter

of Baron von Westphalen , a prominent member of Trier society, and man responsible for

interesting Marx in Romantic literature and Saint-Simonian politics. The following year

Marx’s father sent him to the more serious University of Berlin where he remained four

years, at which time he abandoned his romanticism for the Hegelianism which ruled in

Berlin at the time.

Marx became a member of the Young Hegelian movement. This group, which included

the theologians Bruno Bauer and David Friedrich Strauss, produced a radical critique of

Christianity and, by implication, the liberal opposition to the Prussian autocracy. Finding

a university career closed by the Prussian government, Marx moved into journalism and,

in October 1842, became editor, in Cologne, of the influential Rheinische Zeitung, a

liberal newspaper backed by industrialists. Marx’s articles, particularly those on economic

questions, forced the Prussian government to close the paper. Marx then emigrated to

France.

Arriving in Paris of the end of 1843, Marx rapidly make contact with organized groups of

?migr? German workers and with various sects of French socialists. He also edited the

short-lived Deutsch-Franz?sische Jahrb?cher which was intended to bridge French

socialism and the German radical Hegelians. During his first few months in Paris, Marx

became a communist and set down his views in a series of writings known as the

Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts (1844), which remained unpublished until the

1930s. In the Manuscripts, Marx outlined a humanist conception of communism,

influenced by the philosophy of Ludwig Feuerbach and based on a contrast between the

alienated nature of labor under capitalism and a communist society in which human

beings freely developed their nature in cooperative production. He was also in Paris that

Marx developed his lifelong partnership with Friedrich Engels (1820-1895).

Marx was expelled from Paris at the end of 1844 and with Engels, moved to Brussels

where he remained for the next three years, visiting England where Engels’ family had

cottons spinning interests in Manchester. While in Brussels Marx devoted himself to an

intensive study of history and elaborated what came to be known as the materialist

conception of history. This he developed in a manuscript (published posthumously as The

German Ideology), of which the basic thesis was that “the nature of individuals depends

on the material conditions determining their production.” Marx traced the history of the

various modes of production and predicted the collapse of the present one — industrial

capitalism — and its replacement by communism.

At the same time Marx was composing The German Ideology, he also wrote a polemic

(The Poverty of Philosophy) against the idealistic socialism of P. J. Proudhon

(1809-1865). He also joined the Communist League. This was an organization of German

?migr? workers with its center in London of which Marx and Engels became the major

theoreticians. At a conference of the League in London at the end of 1847 Marx and

Engels were commissioned to write a succinct declaration of their position. Scarcely was

The Communist Manifesto published than the 1848 wave of revolutions broke out in

Europe.

Early in 1848 Marx moved back to Paris with a revolution first broke out and onto

Germany where he founded, again in Cologne, the Neue Rheinische Zeitung. The paper

supported a radical democratic line against the Prussian autocracy and Marx devoted his

main energies to its editorship since the Communist League had been virtually disbanded.

Marx’s paper was suppressed and he sought refuge in London in May 1849 to begin the

“long, sleepless night of exile” that was to last for the rest of his life.

Settling in London, Marx was optimistic about the imminence of a new revolutionary

outbreak in Europe. He rejoined the Communist League and wrote two lengthy pamphlets

on the 1848 revolution in France and its aftermath, The Class Struggles in France and The

18th Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte. He was soon convinced that “a new revolution is

possible only in consequence of a new crisis” and then devoted himself to the study of

political economy in order to determine the causes and conditions of this crisis.

During a first half of the 1850s the Marx family lived in poverty in a three room flat in

the Soho quarter of London. Marx and Jenny already had four children and two more

were to follow. Of these only three survived. Marx’s major source of income at this time

was Engels who was trying a steadily increasing income from the family business in

Manchester. This was supplemented by weekly articles written as a foreign correspondent

for the New York Daily Tribune.

Marx’s major work on political economy made slow progress. By 1857 he had produced a

gigantic 800 page manuscript on capital, landed property, wage labor, the state, foreign

trade and the world market. The Grundrisse (or Outlines) was not published until 1941. In

the early 1860s he broke off his work to compose three large volumes, Theories of

Surplus Value, which discussed the theoreticians of political economy, particularly Adam

Smith and David Ricardo. It was not until 1867 that Marx was able to publish the first

results of his work in volume 1 of Capital, a work which analyzed the capitalist process

of production. In Capital, Marx elaborated his version of the labor theory value and his

conception of surplus value and exploitation which would ultimately lead to a falling rate

of profit in the collapse of industrial capitalism. Volumes II and III were finished during

the 1860s but Marx worked on the manuscripts for the rest of his life and they were

published posthumously by Engels.

One reason why Marx was so slow to publish Capital was that he was devoting his time

and energy to the First International, to whose General Council he was elected at its

inception in 1864. He was particularly active in preparing for the annual Congresses of

the International and and leading the struggle against the anarchist wing led by Mikhail

Bakunin (1814-1876). Although Marx one this contest, the transfer of the seat of the

General Council from London to New York in 1872, which Marx supported, led to this

was decline of the International. The most important political event during the existence

of the International was the Paris Commune of 1871 when the citizens of Paris rebelled

against their government and held the city for two months. On the bloody suppression of

this rebellion, Marx wrote one of his most famous pamphlets, The Civil War in France,

an enthusiastic defense of the Commune.

During the last decade of his life Marx’s health declined and he was incapable of

sustained effort that had so characterized his previous work. He did manage the comment

substantially on contemporary politics, particularly in Germany and Russia. In Germany,

he opposed in his Critique of the Gotha Programme, the tendency of his followers Karl

Liebknecht (1826-1900) and August Bebel (1840-1913) to compromise with state

socialism of Lasalle in the interests of a united socialist party. In his correspondence with

Vera Zasulich Marx contemplated the possibility of Russia’s bypassing the capitalist stage

of development and building communism on the basis of the common ownership of land

characteristic of the village mir.

Marx’s health did not improve. He traveled to Europeans spas and even to Algeria in

search of recuperation. The deaths of his eldest daughter and his wife clouded the last

years of his life. Marx died March 14, 1883 and was buried at Highgate Cemetery in

North London. His collaborator and close friend Friedrich Engels delivered the following

eulogy three days later:

On the 14th of March, at a quarter to three in the afternoon, the greatest living thinker

ceased to think. He had been left alone for scarcely two minutes, and when we came back

we found him in his armchair, peacefully gone to sleep — but for ever.

An immeasurable loss has been sustained both by the militant proletariat of Europe and

America, and by historical science, in the death of this man. The gap that has been left by

the departure of this mighty spirit will soon enough make itself felt.

Just as Darwin discovered the law of development or organic nature, so Marx discovered

the law of development of human history: the simple fact, hitherto concealed by an

overgrowth of ideology, that mankind must first of all eat, drink, have shelter and

clothing, before it can pursue politics, science, art, religion, etc.; that therefore the

production of the immediate material means, and consequently the degree of economic

development attained by a given people or during a given epoch, form the foundation

upon which the state institutions, the legal conceptions, art, and even the ideas on

religion, of the people concerned have been evolved, and in the light of which they must,

therefore, be explained, instead of vice versa, as had hitherto been the case.

But that is not all. Marx also discovered the special law of motion governing the

present-day capitalist mode of production, and the bourgeois society that this mode of

production has created. The discovery of surplus value suddenly threw light on the

problem, in trying to solve which all previous investigations, of both bourgeois

economists and socialist critics, had been groping in the dark.

Two such discoveries would be enough for one lifetime. Happy the man to whom it is

granted to make even one such discovery. But in every single field which Marx

investigated — and he investigated very many fields, none of them superficially — in every

field, even in that of mathematics, he made independent discoveries.

Such was the man of science. But this was not even half the man. Science was for Marx a

historically dynamic, revolutionary force. However great the joy with which he welcomed

a new discovery in some theoretical science whose practical application perhaps it was as

yet quite impossible to envisage, he experienced quite another kind of joy when the

discovery involved immediate revolutionary changes in industry, and in historical

development in general. For example, he followed closely the development of the

discoveries made in the field of electricity and recently those of Marcel Deprez.

For Marx was before all else a revolutionist. His real mission in life was to contribute, in

one way or another, to the overthrow of capitalist society and of the state institutions

which it had brought into being, to contribute to the liberation of the modern proletariat,

which he was the first to make conscious of its own position and its needs, conscious of

the conditions of its emancipation. Fighting was his element. And he fought with a

passion, a tenacity and a success such as few could rival. His work on the first Rheinische

Zeitung (1842), the Paris Vorwarts (1844), the Deutsche Brusseler Zeitung (1847), the

Neue Rheinische Zeitung (1848-49), the New York Tribune (1852-61), and, in addition to

these, a host of militant pamphlets, work in organisations in Paris, Brussels and London,

and finally, crowning all, the formation of the great International Working Men’s

Association — this was indeed an achievement of which its founder might well have been

proud even if he had done nothing else.

And, consequently, Marx was the best hated and most calumniated man of his time.

Governments, both absolutist and republican, deported him from their territories.

Bourgeois, whether conservative or ultra-democratic, vied with one another in heaping

slanders upon him. All this he brushed aside as though it were a cobweb, ignoring it,

answering only when extreme necessity compelled him. And he died beloved, revered

and mourned by millions of revolutionary fellow workers — from the mines of Siberia to

California, in all parts of Europe and America — and I make bold to say that, though he

may have had many opponents, he had hardly one personal enemy.

His name will endure through the ages, and so also will his work.

Marx’s contribution to our understanding of society has been enormous. His thought is

not the comprehensive system evolved by some of his followers under the name of

dialectical materialism. The very dialectical nature of his approach meant that it was

usually tentative and open-ended. There was also the tension between Marx the political

activist and Marx the student of political economy. Many of his expectations about the

future course of the revolutionary movement have, so far, failed to materialize. However,

his stress on the economic factor in society and his analysis of the class structure in class

conflict have had an enormous influence on history, sociology, and study of human

culture.