Among these texts are his early protests against Prussian censorship and juridical formalism, his devastating rebuke of religious and civil emancipation in On the Jewish Question, and his Theses on Feuerbach, the compressed aphorisms in which Marx’s new materialist position breaks definitively with contemplative philosophy. Also included is his 1846 letter to Abraham Lincoln, a politically charged yet diplomatic address that intertwines European socialism with American anti-slavery struggle, and the tract Wage, Price, and Profit, which distills complex economic argument into accessible polemic during the heat of working-class agitation. Despite their brevity, these works retain the structural imprint of dialectical method and reveal, behind the clarity of their prose, a consistent impulse to demystify metaphysical categories through historical determination. This volume gathers the scattered clues of a lifelong effort to bind philosophy to politics, and thought to action.
1842 Remarks on the new Prussian censorship instruction
1842 The Proceedings of the 6th Rhenish Parliament
1842 The Philosophical Manifesto of the Historical School of Law
1844 On the Jewish Question
1845 Theses on Feuerbach
1846 To Abraham Lincoln, President of the United States of America
1865 Wage, Price, Profit
This modern Critical Reader’s Edition includes an illuminating afterword tracing Marx’s intellectual relationships with revolutionary thinkers and philosophers (including Hegel, Feuerbach, Engels, and Ricardo), containing unique research into his ideological development and economic-metaphysical theories, a comprehensive timeline of his life and works, a glossary of Marxist terminology, and a detailed index of all of Marx’s writings. This professional translation renders Marx’s dense, dialectical prose into modern language to preserve the original force and precision of the text. Combined with the scholarly amplifying material, this edition is an indispensable exploration of Marx’s classic works and his enduring Hegelian-Protestant influence in the political, religious, economic, and philosophical spheres.