Requiem for Karl Marx
«Frank Manuel calls his wise and elegant study a requiem, but it is by no means clear that Marx is dead...[Manuel] is too fine a historian to suppose that a discredited doctrine exhausts its capacity to generate consequences...Manuel's book, part biography, part reflection on Marx's reputation and academic afterlife, is an excellent place to begin thinking about his largely nefarious impact. It is based on extended research into the Marx-Engels correspondence, and of course on Manuel's decades of study of the intellectual and political history of the West since the Enlightenment, its utopian traditions especially. The book is a calm yet scathing reckoning, dispassionate yet trenchant. The soul of the world's most famous materialist is not laid to rest, it is laid bare; and the result has the reader both admiring and recoiling...Manuel's biography is extremely powerful in explaining how much of Marx's analytical enterprise was driven by hatred...Manuel's book leaves us with a sense of wonder at the achievement and at its great cost; and this sense of wonder at the most familiar figure in the history of modern thought is a testament to the freshness, the candor and the intellectual tautness of this book.»
Michael Ignatieff, New Republic
As Karl Marx the icon has fallen along with so many communist regimes, we are left with the mystery of Karl Marx the man, the complexities of a life that has profoundly affected millions. A Requiem for Karl Marx is Frank Manuel's searching meditation on that life, a learned and elegantly written engagement with the man and his work. Les mer
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Manuel gives us a psychological portrait rendered with sympathy and critical detachment, a probing look at the connections between the private drama of Marx's life and his revolutionary ideas. Manuel pursues these connections from Marx's adolescence and education in Trier through his university studies, marriage to a German baroness, and early affiliation with French and German radical groups. Here we see Marx in moments of youthful rapture, in periods of despair, in maneuvers of blatant hypocrisy, in outbursts of self-mockery. We follow his involuted response to his status as a converted Jew, observe the psychic toll of debilitating bouts of illness, and witness the shattering effects of his aggressive, often brutal conduct toward friend and foe alike. Manuel analyzes in intricate detail the central role of Marx's enduring relationship with Friedrich Engels, which appears to transcend the bounds of friendship, and his changing behavior toward his wife, Jenny, the neurotic and tragic figure who shared his dismal London exile.
What becomes clear in this narrative is the link between Marx's personal life and his ideas about class struggle, revolutionary strategy, and utopia--as well as the impact of his personal vision and political tactics on the movements that followed him, down to our day.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Harvard University Press
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- ISBN
- 9780674763272
- Utgivelsesår
- 1997
- Format
- 23 x 15 cm
Anmeldelser
«Frank Manuel calls his wise and elegant study a requiem, but it is by no means clear that Marx is dead...[Manuel] is too fine a historian to suppose that a discredited doctrine exhausts its capacity to generate consequences...Manuel's book, part biography, part reflection on Marx's reputation and academic afterlife, is an excellent place to begin thinking about his largely nefarious impact. It is based on extended research into the Marx-Engels correspondence, and of course on Manuel's decades of study of the intellectual and political history of the West since the Enlightenment, its utopian traditions especially. The book is a calm yet scathing reckoning, dispassionate yet trenchant. The soul of the world's most famous materialist is not laid to rest, it is laid bare; and the result has the reader both admiring and recoiling...Manuel's biography is extremely powerful in explaining how much of Marx's analytical enterprise was driven by hatred...Manuel's book leaves us with a sense of wonder at the achievement and at its great cost; and this sense of wonder at the most familiar figure in the history of modern thought is a testament to the freshness, the candor and the intellectual tautness of this book.»
Michael Ignatieff, New Republic
«A wonderful biography...[It] has everything you ever wanted to know about the personal and professional life of the man his friends call 'Old Moor' (because of his dark coloring)...All this is rendered by Manuel with the eye of a novelist.»
David Warsh, Boston Sunday Globe
«The contributions to scholarship in A Requiem for Karl Marx are large...[Manuel] provides a searing, genuinely fresh biographical sketch of Marx, the man, the theorist, and the political activist.»
Eugene D. Genovese, National Review
«[Manuel] has given us a penetrating psychological portrait of, until recently, the bearded idol of millions...Manuel must be applauded for his witty strategies of using Marxist phraseology to turn the art of biography on its head.»
Glenn Spear, Boston Book Review
«A master biographer and intellectual historian, Manuel has here presented us with the mature reflections of years of pondering the Marxist phenomenon...[In] this pithy and elegantly written volume...Manuel has...succeeded in giving us grounds for renewed reflection and perhaps even new insight [into Marx].»
Irwin M. Wall, Central European History
«Manuel's erudition as an intellectual historian and his self-confessed attitude as a 'skeptical utopian' justify the publication of another book on Marx. A combination of monograph and biography, this book makes an excellent case for the continued study of the 'hidden Marx.'»
Library Journal