"The most important political vision was that of communist utopia. At war's end, it had been seventy years since Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels had penned their most famous lines: "Workers of the World Unite!" Marxism had inspired generations of revolutionaries with a summons to political and moral transformation: an end to capitalism and the conflict that private property was thought to bring, and it replacement that would liberate the working masses and restore all of humanity an unspoiled soul. Each dominant political order was challenged by new social groups formed by new economic techniques. The modern class struggle was between those who owned factories and those who worked in them. Accordingly, Marx and Engels anticipated that revolutions would begin in the more advanced industrial countries with large working classes, such as Germany and Great Britain. By disrupting the capitalist order and weakening the great empires, the First World War brought an obvious opportunity to revolutionaries. Most Marxists, however, had by then grown accustomed to working within national political systems, and chose to support their governments in time of war. Not so Vladimir Lenin, a subject of the Russian Empire and a leader of the Bolsheviks. His voluntarist understanding of Marxism, the belief that history could be pushed onto the proper track, led him to see the war as a great chance. For a voluntarist such as Lenin, assenting to the verdict of history gave Marxists a license to issue it themselves. Marx did not see history as fixed in advance but as the work of individuals aware of its principles. Lenin hailed from largely peasant country, which lacked, from a Marxist perspective, the economic conditions for revolution. Once again, he had a revolutionary theory to justify his revolutionary impulse. He believed that colonial empires had granted the capitalist system an extended lease on life, but that a war among empires could bring general revolution. The Russian Empire rumbled first, and Lenin made his move."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Timothy D. Snyder, Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin. New York: Basic Books, 2010
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Marxism
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Marxism
50 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Marxism →
Related Quotes
"We are all Marxists now"
"One of the intellectual charms of Marxism is that it explains the injustice or philistinism of the people in such a w…"
"As I noted earlier, when we look back at the scientific and public climates of discussion 50 years ago, the prevailin…"
"The development of Marxism from the form in which it was evolved by Marx himself, before 1848 in Germany and France a…"
"Marx enriched the venerable myth by a whole Judaeo-Christian messianic ideology: on the one hand, the prophetic role …"
"As for their [Marxists'] argument for revolution – the argument that we must do evil now so that good may come of it …"
"Marxism exists in nineteenth-century thought as a fish exists in water; that is, it ceases to breathe anywhere else."
"That is putting it rather narrowly, for Marxism and its successors, Leninism, Stalinism, and Maoism, cannot be judged…"
"Encompassing a broad spectrum of economic and historical views, Marxist politics seek to apply the theories of Karl M…"
"Marx and Engels themselves can never be taken simply at their word: the errors of their writings on the past should n…"