Marx and Engel's Marxism


A panel discussion organized by the Platypus Affiliated Society held on March 20, 2011, at Left Forum, Pace University.

Audio Recording

Panelists

Benjamin Blumberg - University of Chicago

Nathan Smith - The Platypus Affiated Society

Pam Nogales - New York University

Richard Rubin - Platypus

Tana Forrester - The Platypus Affiliated Society

Description

Marx and Engels were not the preeminent socialists but rather socialism’s greatest critics, distinguishing their “communism” from “reactionary,” “bourgeois” and “democratic” socialism. Lately, Marx is taken for his theoretical analysis of capitalism more than his and Engels’s revolutionary politics, discredited after the 20th century’s spectacular failures of “Marxism.” So what is Marx and Engels’s political legacy? What Marx wrote after the failed “social-democratic” revolutions of 1848 still resonates: “Every demand of the simplest bourgeois financial reform, of the most ordinary liberalism, of the most formal republicanism, of the most insipid democracy, is simultaneously castigated as an ‘attempt on society’ and stigmatized as ‘socialism’.” How does Marx and Engels’s politics of “communism,” that is, socialism aware of its historical vocation, task us today?

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