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Karl Marx Manifesto Analysis

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Karl Marx studied law and philosophy and he was heavily involved in political, economic, and social issues throughout his adult life. In 1843 he relocated to the radical city of Paris where he met his lifelong friend and collaborator, Friedrich Engels. (BBC, 2014) In 1847, a group of prominent communists of various nationalities met in London and commissioned Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels to devise “The Manifesto of the Communist Party.” In the introduction to the manifesto, Marx says the Spectre of Communism is haunting Europe. He writes, “It is high time that Communists should openly, in the face of the whole world, publish their views, their aims, their tendencies, and meet this nursery tale of the Spectre of Communism with a Manifesto …show more content…

They are complicated and different but at the end of the day, they all contain class division and oppression of the lower classes. He states that the current society is the simplest in its makeup, it is the Bourgeois against the Proletariats. I believe the reason he claims it is a two-class division is an attempt to alienate the bourgeois as much as possible. Some working class people are better off than others, but Marx wants to unite them as one. Marx discusses how the bourgeois has centralized everything from the population to production, which gives them control over the proletariats, and paints the bourgeois as this monster that will develop industry and commerce past sustainability. The bourgeois own the factories, shops, housing and they control politics. Marx is playing to the proletariats of the 19th century. If you’re a factory worker during this time, this manifesto is explaining to you that no matter what you do you will always live a hard life because the bourgeois controls everything and the only way out is revolution. Marx goes on to say that the proletariats will abolish private property because they don’t have it to begin with, and because the owners of the means of production are able to oppress others thus, the abolition of private property is a huge facet of communism. Marx even states that the theory of communism can be summed up in one sentence: Abolition of private property. (Karl Marx,

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