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Communist Manifesto

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ISBN-10: 0850364787

ISBN-13: 9780850364781

Edition: N/A

Authors: Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels, Samuel Moore

List price: $1.95
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Description:

Critically and textually up-to-date, this new edition of the classic translation (Samuel Moore, 1888) features an introduction and notes by the eminent Marx scholar David McLellan, prefaces written by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels subsequent to the original 1848 publication, and correctionsof errors made in earlier versions. Regarded as one of the most influential political tracts ever written, The Communist Manifesto serves as the foundation document of the Marxist movement. This summary of the Marxist vision is an incisive account of the world-view Marx and Engels had evolved duringtheir hectic intellectual and political collaboration of the previous few years.
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Book details

List price: $1.95
Publisher: Merlin Press Limited
Publication date: 1/1/1998
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 29
Size: 5.75" wide x 8.75" long x 0.30" tall
Weight: 0.308
Language: English

Karl Heinrich Marx, one of the fathers of communism, was born on May 5, 1818 in Trier, Germany. He was educated at a variety of German colleges, including the University of Jena. He was an editor of socialist periodicals and a key figure in the Working Man's Association. Marx co-wrote his best-known work, "The Communist Manifesto" (1848), with his friend, Friedrich Engels. Marx's most important work, however, may be "Das Kapital" (1867), an analysis of the economics of capitalism. He died on March 14, 1883 in London, England.

Friedrich Engels is perhaps best remembered as the confidant, colleague, and benefactor of Karl Marx. Born into a Calvinist family that owned fabric mills in the Rhineland and had business interests in Manchester, England, Engels joined the family business at age 16; he never had a formal university education. Despite his family's industrial background, Engels was sympathetic to the poverty of the working masses. At age 18 he published an attack on industrial poverty, and later joined the Hegelian movement that so influenced Marx and bothered conservative Prussian authorities. Engels first met Marx in 1842, while Marx was editor of a radical newspaper in Cologne. However, they did not…    

Editor's Preface
Foreword
The Communist Manifesto
Principles of Communism
The Communist Manifesto 150 Years Later