Marshall Berman: Adventures in Marxism

Marshall Berman (1940-2013)

A new beginning for Marxism might just be on the horizon of a landscape despoiled by Soviet communism and a now wobbling world capitalism. The attention attracted by the 150th anniversary of The Communist Manifesto included laudatory references to Marx in venues as unexpected as The New York Times and The New Yorker . More predictably, the tributes in such publications focused on the strength of Marx as a critic of capital or a powerful wordsmith, rather than as an advocate of communism.

But, if Marxism is to enjoy a rebirth in the coming century, appreciation needs to move beyond its value as a critical tool or a literary pleasure. The emancipatory potential of Marxism, its capacity to configure a world beyond the daily grind of selling one’s labor to stay alive, will have to be established anew. No one has made a better start to this task than the esteemed critic and writer Marshall Berman. Berman first read The Communist Manifesto in the same week as Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman while at high school.

A few years later, now a student at Columbia University, he was handing out copies of Marx’s 1844 Manuscripts , purchased for 50 cents each at the (Soviet) Four Continents Bookstore in New York, as holiday presents for friends and relatives. Here was the beginning of a lifelong engagement with Marxism that, as this volume demonstrates, has been both consistent and refreshing. In these pages are discussions of work on Marx and Marxism by Edmund Wilson, Jerrold Siegel, James Billington, Georg Lukacs, Irving Howe and Isaac Babel. They are brought together in a single embrace by Berman’s spirited appreciation of Marxism as expressive, playful, sometimes even a little vulgar, but always an adventure.

https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/126994

Download Adventures in Marxism

****************************************************************

Dilip Simeon: Militant capitalism, bad infinity, and the longing for total revolution

Alessandra Mezzadri: Informal labour, the majority world and the need for inclusive theories and politics

March 18, 1871: Revolt of the Paris Commune; March 18, 1921: The Bolsheviks crush the Kronstadt sailors’ rebellion against tyranny

The Bolshevik Heritage. By Dilip Simeon

Russia targets its oldest human rights group, Memorial

The Gulag Archipelago: An Epic of True Evil

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn: Letter to the Soviet Leaders (1974)

Samizdat: Russia’s Underground Press (1970)

Decentralizing the Cold War: an interview

The Legacy of Liu Xiaobo

Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Liu Xiaobo (1955-2017) Dead At 61, After Years Of Imprisonment. ‘Without freedom, China will always remain far from civilized ideals’

Book review: The State as Faction: Mao’s Cultural Revolution

How one man went from China’s Communist party golden child to enemy of the state

Nationalism = Enforced patriotism

N.S. Lyons: The Triumph and Terror of Wang Huning

The Cultural Revolution in Tibet: A Photographic Record. By LUO SILING

‘We just want to live in a normal world’: China’s young protesters speak out, and disappear

Roland Barthes in China; or how to plumb the depths of professorial vacuity…

Vanessa Hua on Writing About the Forgotten Women in Mao’s Inner Circle

Glory Days, or remembering how Indians love(d) China