Karl Marx greatness and illusion
Material type: TextPublication details: Cambridge Harvard University Press 2016ISBN:- 9780674971615
- HX39 .S74 2016
Item type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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OPJGU Sonepat- Campus Main Library | General Books | 335.4092 ST-K (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 134566 |
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335.4092 MA- Marx for today | 335.4092 MC-K Karl Marx a biography | 335.4092 PR-K Karl Marx and world literature | 335.4092 ST-K Karl Marx greatness and illusion | 335.40954 MO-R Red and green five decades of the Indian Maoist Movement | 335.40954 NA-N Neo-naxal challenge issues & options | 335.41 AL-M Marx and the alternative to capitalism |
"First published by Penguin Books Ltd, London."--Title page verso
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Prologue: the making of an icon, 1883-1920 -- Fathers and sons: the ambiguities of becoming a Prussian -- The lawyer, the poet and the lover -- Berlin and the approaching twilight of the gods -- Rebuilding the polis: reason takes on the Christian state -- The alliance of those who think and those who suffer: Paris, 1844 -- Exile in Brussels, 1845-8 -- The approach of revolution: the problem about Germany -- The mid-century revolutions -- London -- The critique of political economy -- Capital, social democracy and the International -- Back to the future.
As much a portrait of his time as a biography of the man, Karl Marx: Greatness and Illusion returns the author of Das Kapital to his nineteenth-century world, before twentieth-century inventions transformed him into Communism's patriarch and fierce lawgiver. Gareth Stedman Jones depicts an era dominated by extraordinary challenges and new notions about God, human capacities, empires, and political systems--and, above all, the shape of the future. In the aftermath of the Battle of Waterloo, a Europe-wide argument began about the industrial transformation of England, the Revolution in France, and the hopes and fears generated by these occurrences. Would the coming age belong to those enthralled by the revolutionary events and ideas that had brought this world into being, or would its inheritors be those who feared and loathed it? Stedman Jones gives weight not only to Marx's views but to the views of those with whom he contended. He shows that Marx was as buffeted as anyone else living through a period that both confirmed and confounded his interpretations--and that ultimately left him with terrible intimations of failure. Karl Marx allows the reader to understand Marx's milieu and development, and makes sense of the devastating impact of new ways of seeing the world conjured up by Kant, Hegel, Feuerbach, Ricardo, Saint-Simon, and others. We come to understand how Marx transformed and adapted their philosophies into ideas that would have--through twists and turns inconceivable to him--an overwhelming impact across the globe in the twentieth century.--
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