Marxism – the basics. Karl Marx 1818 - 1883 Mid- Late Nineteenth Century Britain Unrest and...

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Marxism – the basics

Karl Marx 1818 - 1883

Mid- Late Nineteenth Century Britain

•Unrest and protest – Chartism

•Long hours, low pay

•Periodic unemployment

•No Welfare State

•No universal right to vote

Mid-Nineteenth Century Europe

Revolution in France - 1848

Revolutions elsewhere in Europe

Times of Turmoil

Marx’s insight:

It’s all about money

Some have it……

They are called capitalists (or the bourgeoisie)

Others don’t …..

They are called the workers (or the proletariat)

Capitalists and workers are thrown together into relations of production

They don’t get on too well

Capitalists want

the maximum PROFIT – and the lowest costs

Workers want

the highest wage for the least work

These two groups are locked in mortal

combat

The Capitalists compete with each other.

The successful capitalist’s get richer and richer

…and the failed capitalists fall down into the working class

The workers meanwhile are more and more exploited by the remaining capitalists – they

get poorer and poorer

Marx said that eventually the workers will rise up in revolution

against the capitalist class

A new communist society will be created

Key Differences from “Leninism” Key Differences from “Leninism”

Marx’s revolution was a “natural” one that Marx’s revolution was a “natural” one that would only occur when a nation that had would only occur when a nation that had reached point in industrial society. It would reached point in industrial society. It would not not be dictated by the state!be dictated by the state!

It would be a revolution of the Proletariat… a It would be a revolution of the Proletariat… a “Dictatorship of the Proletariat.”“Dictatorship of the Proletariat.”

Key Differences from “Leninism” Key Differences from “Leninism”

The development of Lenin's ideas about a "vanguard" party leading the proletarian revolution developed into the notion of a centralized governing party, a communist party, which would rule on behalf of the working classes. Instead of Marx's ideals of a "dictatorship of the proletariat," Lenin's Russia was led by a Lenin's Russia was led by a dictatorship of the Communist Party, whose leaders simply dictatorship of the Communist Party, whose leaders simply assumed they knew what was best for the working classesassumed they knew what was best for the working classes.

After Lenin's death, Josef Stalin carried this even further, developing a totalitarian dictatorship.