Historical
Tendency of Capitalist Accumulation
In support of “The Prince” we now go straight to the most
famous work of the Communist canon: Karl Marx’s “Capital”.
The short Chapter 32 is the second last chapter in Volume 1
of “Capital”. It is a broad-brush summary of the first volume. Please use the first
link below to download and read the document.
This chapter is only about 1000 words long, the same length
as a newspaper “feature” article. It is one of several passages in the works of
Marx, Engels and Lenin that compress world history into a single sweep, in this
case from the time of slaves and serfs, through the stages of the development
of capitalism, to the anticipated proletarian revolution.
Other such passages in the “classics” include Chapter 9 of
“The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State” by Frederick
Engels”, which will be posted as the next item, and the first few pages of “The
Communist Manifesto”, by Marx and Engels, which is the main text in the next
part of this “Basics” course.
The “Basics”
course is partly an attempt to answer the frequently-expressed desire for a
“simple” explanation of the politics of the working class and of the
intellectual partisans of the working class.
In attempting this task, texts have been chosen that
exemplify the various original authors’ own attempts to respond to, and to
satisfy, the manifest popular craving for a brief and easily-absorbed overall
explanation of how politics works. This chapter from Marx is one of those.
Please download and read the text via the
following link:
Further reading:
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