Manifesto Essay

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    The Communist Manifesto The Communist Manifesto is too long to be a concise declaration of principles and too short to be a book. It is comprised of about 17,000 words including various introductions by Friedrich Engels. It is arranged, basically, in four sections. The first section introduces the Marxian idea of history as a class struggle. It juxtaposes the conditions and development of various strata of society, "freeman and slave, patrician and plebian, lord and serf...in a word, oppressor

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    society with significant capital. One of the better known ideologies is Marxism, which explains how a nation should form itself to develop a communist society. Karl Marx illustrates his ideas of Marxism in The Communist Manifesto. A point of controversy within the Communist Manifesto addresses how nationalism does not help form the communist state but rather rhetorically seeks to deny the sense of nationality. The writings of Benedict Anderson are about how the nation state manifests itself through

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    The Communist Manifesto was built with intentions to serve as a program meant for the Communist party during its time of publishing. Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, philosopher and author (titled respectively), composed the document as a form of instruction for the followers of a new congress, which is known as “The Second Congress”. The duo worked tirelessly throughout the final months of the year 1847 and through January of 1848, only to have a modified adaptation of their original document published

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    The Communist Manifesto is one of the most influential and widely read documents of the modern history. It is the Holy Scripture for the communists. The Manifesto reflects an attempt to explain the goals of Communism, as well as the theory underlying this movement. The Manifesto created an era of revolution in Europe. It was written by Marx and co-authored by his friend and comrade, Friedrich Engels in 1848 in a view to unite all workers of the world. In the following passages, I will try to summarize

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    The Communist Manifesto is the product and realization of a series of revolutions. Marx breaks up history into a series of stages-each with a recurring pattern of each stage ending with a revolution. A power group, most often the nobility or the church, restructures the social dynamics after a revolution in a way that benefits them the most. The restructuring leads to a class being exploited which is what drives each stage. This pattern started in the ancient times and continues into the modern period

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    A perfect world would consist of equal members all having food and shelter, devoid of bigotry, sexism, and any other form of oppression. Communism is one proposed solution to these problems. Communism intends for the poor to rise from their squalor and reach financial and social status equal to that of the middle-class landowners, but requires that all means of production be controlled by the state. In other words, no one can own his or her own business or produce his or her own goods because the

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    In André Breton’s Manifeste du surréalisme, the ways in which Surrealism can be applied to both the artistic realm and everyday life are explored, as well as the importance placed on dreams. Breton believed in “la résolution future de ces deux états, en apparence si contradictoires, que sont le rêve et la realité, en une sorte de réalité absolue, du surréalité” (Breton and Bonnet, 1988). Based on the assumption that Luis Buñuel and Salvador Dalí wished to remain loyal to Breton’s definition of Surrealism

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    The Communist Manifesto, originally drafted as, “Manifesto of the Communist Party”, is a pamphlet written by Karl Marx, that in essence reflects an attempt to explain the goals and objectives of Communism, while also explaining the concrete theories about the nature of society in relation to the political ideology. The Communist Manifesto breaks down the relationship of socio-economic classes and specifically identifies the friction between those classes. Karl Marx essentially presents a well analyzed

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    proclaims. This phantom maybe the resolution to rid a country of greed and exploitation. Karl Marx in the collaboration with Frederich Engels elucidates his concern of capitalism and his yearn for a communistic society in the book, The Communist Manifesto. In this book he explains his idea of true communism. True communism is a social order in which all citizens are equal. In communism equality means that society is classless, moneyless, and stateless. Citizens will no longer be able to own property

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    Manifesto of the Communist Party Political Ideologies The basic thought running through the manifesto is that all history has been a history of class struggles between the exploited and exploiting, between dominated and dominating classes at different stages of social evolution. (Slavery, Feudalism, Capitalism, Socialism, Communism). This struggle, however, is believed to have reached a stage where the exploited and oppressed class (the proletariat) can no longer liberate itself from the bourgeoisie

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