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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2018

Pages: 85-105

Series: Studies in East European Thought

Full citation:

James Farr, "The communist manifestoes", Studies in East European Thought 70, 2018, pp. 85-105.

The communist manifestoes

media of Marxism and Bolshevik contagion in America

James Farr

pp. 85-105

in: Studies in East European Thought 70, 2018.

Abstract

The Communist Manifesto—rhetorical masterpiece of proletarian revolution—was published 69 years before the Bolshevik Revolution and had a complex reception history that implicated America and Russia in the long interval between. But once the Revolution shook the world, the Manifesto became indissolubly tied to it, forged together as constitutive moments of some supratemporal revolutionary dynamic. Its subsequent and further reception in America bore the marks of Bolshevik contagion, negatively in many quarters, positively in the early American communist movement. As various communist parties morphed and multiplied in the 1910s and 1920s, they announced themselves in manifestoes—communist manifestoes that in form and content followed and kept centrally in view the original of 1848. This essay explores the symbioses and synergies between the Manifesto, its Anglophone reception in America, and the Bolshevik contagion that spread into an emergent medium, namely, the manifestoes of American communist parties that heralded the revolution in Russia, a century ago.

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2018

Pages: 85-105

Series: Studies in East European Thought

Full citation:

James Farr, "The communist manifestoes", Studies in East European Thought 70, 2018, pp. 85-105.