1. Life and Work
Karl Marx was born on 5
May 1818, the son of the lawyer Heinrich Marx and Henriette
Pressburg. His father was descended from an old family of Jewish
rabbis, but was himself a liberal admirer of the Enlightenment
and not religious. He converted to Protestantism a few years
before Karl was born to escape restrictions still imposed upon
Jews in Prussia. His mother was of Dutch-Jewish origin.
Karl Marx
studied at the Friedrich-Wilhelm Gymnasium
in Trier, and at the universities of Bonn and Berlin. His
doctoral thesis, Differenz der demokritischen
und epikurischen Naturphilosophie, was accepted at the
University of Jena on 15 April 1841. In 1843 he married Jenny
von Westphalen, daughter of Baron von Westphalen, a high
Prussian government official.
Marx’s
university studies covered many fields, but centred around
philosophy and religion. He frequented the circle of the more
radical followers of the great philosopher Hegel, befriended one
of their main representatives, Bruno Bauer, and was especially
influenced by the publication in 1841 of Ludwig Feuerbach’s Das
Wesen des Christentums (The Nature of Christianity). He had
intended to teach philosophy at the university, but that quickly
proved to be unrealistic. He then turned towards journalism,
both to propagandise his ideas and to gain a livelihood. He
became editor of the Rheinische Zeitung, a
liberal newspaper of Cologne, in May 1842. His interest turned
more and more to political and social questions, which he
treated in an increasing radical way. The paper was banned by
the Prussian authorities a year later.
Karl Marx then
planned to publish a magazine called Die
Deutsch-Französische Jahrbücher in Paris, in order to
escape Prussian censorship and to be more closely linked and
identified with the real struggles for political and social
emancipation which, at that time, were centred around France. He
emigrated to Paris with his wife and met there his lifelong
friend Friedrich Engels.
Marx had become
critical of Hegel’s philosophical political system, a
criticism which would lead to his first major work, Zur
Kritik des Hegelschen Rechtsphilosophie (1843, A Critique of
Hegel’s Philosophy of Right). Intensively studying history and
political economy during his stay in Paris, he became strongly
influenced by socialist and working-class circles in the French
capital. With his ’Paris Manuscripts’ (Oekonomisch-philosophische
Manuskripte, 1844), he definitely became a communist, i.e. a
proponent of collective ownership of the means of production.
He was expelled
from France at the beginning of 1845 through pressure from the
Prussian embassy and migrated to Brussels. His definite turn
towards historical materialism (see below) would occur with his
manuscript Die Deutsche Ideologue (1845-6)
culminating in the eleven Theses on Feuerbach,
written together with Engels but never published during his
lifetime.
This led also
to a polemical break with the most influential French socialist
of that period, Proudhon, expressed in the only book Marx would
write in French, Misère de la Philosophie
(1846).
Simultaneously
he became more and more involved in practical socialist
politics, and started to work with the Communist League, which
asked Engels and himself to draft their declaration of
principle, This is the origin of the Communist
Manifesto (1848, Manifest der
Kommunistischen Partei).
As soon as the
revolution of 1848 broke out, he was in turn expelled from
Belgium and went first to France, then, from April 1848 on, to
Cologne. His political activity during the German revolution of
1848 centred around the publication of the daily paper Die
Neue Rheinische Zeitung, which enjoyed wide popular support.
After the victory of the Prussian counter-revolution, the paper
was banned in May 1849 and Marx was expelled from Prussia. He
never succeeded in recovering his citizenship.
Marx emigrated
to London, where he would stay, with short interruptions, till
the end of his life. For fifteen years, his time would be mainly
taken up with economic studies, which would lead to the
publication first of Zur Kritik der Politischen
Oekonomie (1859) and later of Das Kapital,
Vol. I (1867). He spent long hours at the British Museum,
studying the writings of all the major economists, as well as
the government Blue Books, Hansard and many other contemporary
sources on social and economic conditions in Britain and the
world. His readings also covered technology, ethnology and
anthropology, besides political economy and economic history;
many notebooks were filled with excerpts from the books he read.
But while the
activity was mainly studious, he never completely abandoned
practical politics. He first hoped that the Communist League
would be kept alive, thanks to a revival of revolution. When
this did not occur, he progressively dropped out of emigré
politics, but not without writing a scathing indictment of
French counter-revolution in Der 18. Brumaire
des Louis Bonaparte (1852), which was in a certain sense the
balance sheet of his political activity and an analysis of the
late 1848-52 cycle of revolution and counter-revolution. He
would befriend British trade-union leaders and gradually attempt
to draw them towards international working class interests and
politics. These efforts culminated in the creation of the
International Working Men’s Association (1864) - the so-called
First International - in which Marx and Engels would play a
leading role, politically as well as organisationally.
It was not only
his political interest and revolutionary passion that prevented
Marx from becoming an economist pure and simple. It was also the
pressure of material necessity. Contrary to his hopes, he never
succeeded in earning enough money from his scientific writings
to sustain himself and his growing family. He had to turn to
journalism to make a living, He had initial, be it modest,
success in this field, when he became European correspondent of
the New York Daily Tribune in the summer of
1851. But he never had a regular income from that collaboration,
and it ended after ten years.
So the years of
his London exile were mainly years of great material deprivation
and moral suffering. Marx suffered greatly from the fact that he
could not provide a minimum of normal living conditions for his
wife and children, whom he loved deeply. Bad lodgings in
cholera-stricken Soho, insufficient food and medical care, led
to a chronic deterioration of his wife’s and his own health
and to the death of several of their children; that of his
oldest son Edgar in 1855 struck him an especially heavy blow. Of
his seven children only three daughters survived, Jenny, Laura
and Eleanor (Tussy). All three were very gifted and would play a
significant role in the international labour movement, Eleanor
in Britain, Jenny and Laura in France (where they married the
socialist leaders Longuet and Lafargue).
During this
long period of material misery, Marx survived thanks to the
financial and moral support of his friend Friedrich Engels,
whose devotion to him stands as an exceptional example of
friendship in the history of science and politics. Things
started to improve when Marx came into his mother’s
inheritance; when the first independent working-class parties
(followers of Lassalle on the one hand, of Marx and Engels on
the other) developed in Germany, creating a broader market for
his writings; when the IWMA became influential in several
European countries, and when Engels’ financial conditions
improved to the point where he would sustain the Marx family on
a more regular basis.
The period
1865- 71 was one in which Marx’s concentration on economic
studies and on the drafting of Das Kapital was interrupted more
and more by current political commitments to the IWMA,
culminating in his impassioned defence of the Paris Commune (Der
Bürgerkrieg in Frankreich, 1871). But the satisfaction of
being able to participate a second time in a real revolution -
be it only vicariously - was troubled by the deep divisions
inside the IMWA, which led to the split with the anarchists
grouped around Michael Bakunin.
Marx did not
succeed in finishing a final version of Das
Kapital vols II and III, which were published posthumously,
after extensive editing, by Engels. It remains controversial
whether he intended to add two more volumes to these, according
to an initial plan. More than 25 years after the death of Marx,
Karl Kautsky edited what is often called vol. IV of Das
Kapital, his extensive critique of other economists: Theorien
über den Mehrwert (Theories of Surplus Value).
Marx’s final
years were increasingly marked by bad health, in spite of
slightly improved living conditions. Bad health was probably the
main reason why the final version of vols II and III of Capital
could not be finished. Although he wrote a strong critique of
the Programme which was adopted by the unification congress
(1878) of German social democracy (Kritik des
Gothaer Programms), he was heartened by the creation of that
united working-class party in his native land, by the spread of
socialist organisations throughout Europe, and by the growing
influence of his ideas in the socialist movement. His wife fell
ill in 1880 and died the next year. This came as a deadly blow
to Karl Marx, who did not survive her for long. He himself died
in London on 14 March 1883.
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