Description

Book Synopsis

For a little over a decade after the ignominious collapse of the Revolution of 1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels worked as professional journalists. Writing from London for newspapers in the United States and, eventually, on the Continent, Marx continued while living in exile the analysis of the crisis of revolution that he first began in direct engagement with revolutionary events, most notably in The Class Struggles in France (1850) and The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte (1852). In what became a vast body of material, through this journalistic work Marx elaborated the critical concept of "bonapartism" first abumbrated in the latter book. Continuing his effort to learn the lesson of 1848, Marx concentrated on the crisis of modern society and the new mass democratic state that emerged, in the absence of the dictatorship of the proletariat, to meet that crisis.

This volume is the first to compile the journalistic works of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels dealing with what they termed Bonapartism. The topics examined include the emergence of a new unionist capitalist politics in Britain, post-1848 Chartism, the East India Company, European nationalisms, and the Taiping Rebellion in China.



Table of Contents

Chapter One—1848, Louis Bonaparte’s Coup D’État, and Revolutionary Exile

  • Introduction
  • The Constitution of the French Republic Adopted November 4, 1848 June 14, 1851
  • Germany: Revolution and Counterrevolution (Engels) October 1851–December 1852
  • Real Causes Why the French Proletarians Remained Comparatively Inactive in December Last (Engels) February–April 1852
  • Review of the Literature on the Coup d’État (Georg Eccarius) September–December 1852
  • Movements of Mazzini and Kossuth—League with Louis Napoleon—Palmerston October 19, 1852
  • The Berlin Conspiracy April 18, 1853
  • The Berlin Conspiracy—London Police—Mazzini—Radetzky April 21, 1853
  • Position of England and France December 27, 1853
  • Review of Karl Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (Engels) August 1859

Chapter Two—British Politics, Society, and the Press 1852–53

  • Introduction
  • General Election in Great Britain August–September 1852
  • Pauperism and Free Trade—The Approaching Commercial Crisis November 1, 1852
  • Attempts to Form a New Opposition Party November 25, 1852
  • A Superannuated Administration—Prospects of the Coalition Ministry—&c. January 28, 1853
  • The Duchess of Sutherland and Slavery February 9, 1853
  • Capital Punishment—Mr. Cobden’s Pamphlet—Regulations of the Bank of England February 18, 1853
  • The Italian Insurrection—British Politics February 25, 1853

Chapter Three—Capitalist Globalization and the 1853 EIC Charter Renewal

  • Introduction
  • Revolution in China and in Europe June 14, 1853
  • India June 9, 1853
  • Sir Charles Wood’s East Indian Reforms June 22, 1853
  • The British Rule in India June 25, 1853
  • The East India Company—Its History and Results July 11, 1853
  • The Government of India July 20, 1853
  • The East India Question July 25, 1853
  • The Future Results of British Rule in India August 8, 1853

Chapter Four—Late Chartism, the Irish Question, and the Factory System

  • Introduction
  • Irish Tenant Right July 11, 1853
  • Chartism July 14, 1853
  • Struggle Over the Ten Hours Bill July 22, 1853
  • Cabs—IrelandAugust 12, 1853
  • Strikes—I October 17, 1853
  • Strikes—II November 15, 1853
  • The Labor Question—I November 28, 1853
  • The Labor Question—II November–December 1853
  • Opening of the Labour Parliament March 24, 1854
  • Letter to the Labour Parliament March 18, 1854
  • The English Middle Class August 1, 1854
  • The Association for Administrative Reform June 8, 1855
  • Anti-Church Movement June 28, 1855
  • Speech at the Anniversary of the People’s Paper April 19, 1856
  • Condition of Factory Laborers April 22, 1857

Marx and Engels on Bonapartism: Selected

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      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 28/02/2023
      ISBN13: 9781666928044, 978-1666928044
      ISBN10: 1666928046

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      For a little over a decade after the ignominious collapse of the Revolution of 1848, Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels worked as professional journalists. Writing from London for newspapers in the United States and, eventually, on the Continent, Marx continued while living in exile the analysis of the crisis of revolution that he first began in direct engagement with revolutionary events, most notably in The Class Struggles in France (1850) and The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte (1852). In what became a vast body of material, through this journalistic work Marx elaborated the critical concept of "bonapartism" first abumbrated in the latter book. Continuing his effort to learn the lesson of 1848, Marx concentrated on the crisis of modern society and the new mass democratic state that emerged, in the absence of the dictatorship of the proletariat, to meet that crisis.

      This volume is the first to compile the journalistic works of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels dealing with what they termed Bonapartism. The topics examined include the emergence of a new unionist capitalist politics in Britain, post-1848 Chartism, the East India Company, European nationalisms, and the Taiping Rebellion in China.



      Table of Contents

      Chapter One—1848, Louis Bonaparte’s Coup D’État, and Revolutionary Exile

      • Introduction
      • The Constitution of the French Republic Adopted November 4, 1848 June 14, 1851
      • Germany: Revolution and Counterrevolution (Engels) October 1851–December 1852
      • Real Causes Why the French Proletarians Remained Comparatively Inactive in December Last (Engels) February–April 1852
      • Review of the Literature on the Coup d’État (Georg Eccarius) September–December 1852
      • Movements of Mazzini and Kossuth—League with Louis Napoleon—Palmerston October 19, 1852
      • The Berlin Conspiracy April 18, 1853
      • The Berlin Conspiracy—London Police—Mazzini—Radetzky April 21, 1853
      • Position of England and France December 27, 1853
      • Review of Karl Marx, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (Engels) August 1859

      Chapter Two—British Politics, Society, and the Press 1852–53

      • Introduction
      • General Election in Great Britain August–September 1852
      • Pauperism and Free Trade—The Approaching Commercial Crisis November 1, 1852
      • Attempts to Form a New Opposition Party November 25, 1852
      • A Superannuated Administration—Prospects of the Coalition Ministry—&c. January 28, 1853
      • The Duchess of Sutherland and Slavery February 9, 1853
      • Capital Punishment—Mr. Cobden’s Pamphlet—Regulations of the Bank of England February 18, 1853
      • The Italian Insurrection—British Politics February 25, 1853

      Chapter Three—Capitalist Globalization and the 1853 EIC Charter Renewal

      • Introduction
      • Revolution in China and in Europe June 14, 1853
      • India June 9, 1853
      • Sir Charles Wood’s East Indian Reforms June 22, 1853
      • The British Rule in India June 25, 1853
      • The East India Company—Its History and Results July 11, 1853
      • The Government of India July 20, 1853
      • The East India Question July 25, 1853
      • The Future Results of British Rule in India August 8, 1853

      Chapter Four—Late Chartism, the Irish Question, and the Factory System

      • Introduction
      • Irish Tenant Right July 11, 1853
      • Chartism July 14, 1853
      • Struggle Over the Ten Hours Bill July 22, 1853
      • Cabs—IrelandAugust 12, 1853
      • Strikes—I October 17, 1853
      • Strikes—II November 15, 1853
      • The Labor Question—I November 28, 1853
      • The Labor Question—II November–December 1853
      • Opening of the Labour Parliament March 24, 1854
      • Letter to the Labour Parliament March 18, 1854
      • The English Middle Class August 1, 1854
      • The Association for Administrative Reform June 8, 1855
      • Anti-Church Movement June 28, 1855
      • Speech at the Anniversary of the People’s Paper April 19, 1856
      • Condition of Factory Laborers April 22, 1857

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