MARX AND ENGELS
INTERNET ARCHIVE
So What's New,
You Ask...?
This feature began on January 1 1996. Thus, it
doesn't list any "new things" before that date.
*
NOTE: The new central hub for
the MEIA is http://www.marx.org. Our
gracious hosts at Colorado's
Progressive Sociology Network
and Computers for a Sustainable
Future will remain our major U.S. mirror site. However, until we
perfect the system for automated maintenance of mirror sites, this one
will suffer a lag behind marx.org. Please check http://www.marx.org for material added
after Labor Day 1996.
LABOR DAY 1996!: ADDITION:
Engels' series of articles in 1881 for English newspaper The Labour
Standard. These quick and insightful reads -- like "Trades
Unions" and "A Working Men's Party" and "Social Classes -- Necessary
and Superfluous" -- highlight Engels' great talent for popular
journalism. (Happy Labor Day, sister and brothers!)
LABOR DAY 1996!: ADDITION:
Lenin's famous 1920 booklet Left-Wing
Communism -- an Infantile Disorder. This work was written in
rebuttal of ultra-left tendencies in Germany and Holland following the
Russian Revolution. Poignant observations about "revolutionaries" who
would "abandon the unions as reactionary" remain as sharp as ever --
indeed, you will find such ultra-leftists all over the net. Lenin notes
that Communists go where working people collect. Unions are the working
class' first line of defence in a capitalist system, therefore,
Communists must work there.
September 1: ADDITION: Engels'
celebrated, insightful, and entertaining masterpiece, the 1877 Herr Eugen
Dühring's Revolution in Science -- better known as
Anti-Dühring. Marx and Engels had warned that
Lassellean-style opportunist concessions at the heart of the German
workers' movement would lead to a more general and theoretically
destructive opportunism. Berlin prof Duhring was one such
manifestation. In this work, Engels takes him to task, and during that
develops a variety of Marxist concepts.
August 31: ADDITION: Engels'
1875 letter
to August Bebel. Bebel kept this letter tucked away from public
viewing for 36 years, finally publishing it in 1911. It's often
published as a "follow-up" to Marx's better known Gotha
Programme. Among other things, it analyzes errors in Germany's
Lassallean labor movement, such as regarding all other classes as "only
one reactionary mass" in relation to the working class.
August 30: ADDITION: Lenin's
1914 article Disruption
of Unity Under Cover of Outcries for Unity -- a rather scathing
attack against Trotsky's "non-factional" periodical Borba. Also,
Lenin's 1915 article On
the Two Lines of the Revolution -- rebutting Plekhanov's theory
of "ascending/descending" revolution, as well as Trotsky's theory of
"Permanent Revolution." (Thanks to Carl Kavanagh.)
August 29: ADDITION: J. V.
Stalin's 1924 speech Trotskyism
or Leninism? (Thanks to Carl Kavanagh.)
August 27: ADDITION: Trotsky's
1937 article Pacifism
as the Servant of Imperialism. (Thanks to J. J.
Plant.)
August 22: ADDITION: J. V.
Stalin's well-known 1913 work, Marxism
and the National Question -- which developed the Bolshevik
theory/programme on the subject of "nations" and "peoples." (Thanks
to Carl Kavanagh.)
August 21: ADDITION: More in
the on-going transcription of Marx's 1894 Capital
III. Chapter 37, 38 and 39. (Thanks to David
Walters.)
August 20: ADDITION: The new
Mao Tse-tung
Internet Archive opens with over a meg of material -- including
On
Contradiction, On
Protracted War and On New
Democracy. (Thanks to Jay Miles.)
August 13: ADDITION: Trotsky's
1937 article Stalinism
and Bolshevism. (Thanks to Mike Griffin.)
August 12: ADDITION: The new
Georgi
Dimitrov Internet Archive. This includes the 1935 Report
to the VII Congress, along with two smaller items, the 1935 Youth
Against Facism and 1936 The
People's Front.
August 6: ADDITION: Trotsky's
1914 article War
and the International. (Thanks to David Walters.)
August 4: ADDITION: Lenin's
1913 article What
can be done for public education -- which takes a look at the
New York public library system. (Thanks to Richard Bos.)
August 4: ADDITION: Another 20
or so photographs added to the Lenin Internet
Archive.
August 3: ADDITION: Lenin's
1913 unfinished review of a new four-volume collection of The
Marx-Engels Correspondence. This document has links to the
early letters Engels wrote to Marx -- those very interesting letters
themselves are also just added, including Engels' 1847 letter telling
Marx about his own "Principles of Communism" document, which would
evolve into the Communist Manifesto.
July 28: ADDITION: Another
Mariategui essay, to the June 1929 Latin American Communist Conference,
on Anti-Imperialism.
July 28: ADDITION: More Lenin,
on the topic of what "Marxism" is: Marxism
and Revisionism and The
Historical Destiny of the Doctrine of Karl Marx.
July 27: ADDITION: Marx's 1856
speech at the anniversary of
The People's Paper -- an interesting talk on the
antagonism between modern productive powers and social relations.
July 27: ADDITION: The opening
of the transcription of Leon Trotsky's 1930 3-volume book The
History of the Russian Revolution. The preface and first
two chapters. (Thanks to David Webb.)
July 27: ADDITION: J. V.
Stalin's 1938 essay Dialectical
and Historical Materialism. The transcriber writes: "I frankly
don't know how you feel about this one, but the source is historically
important as representing the statement of the line at that
time." (Thanks to M.)
July 27: ADDITION: Another
installment in the on-going transcription of Marx's 1894 Capital
III. Chapter 36, Pre-Capitalist
Relationships. (Thanks to David Walters.)
July 26: ADDITION: A user and
friend of the MEIA wrote: "I've tried an Alta Vista search, but have
been unable to find an online copy of Lenin's A Great Beginning,
in which he gives the most succinct definition of 'class' -- have you
seen it online any place?" No, we hadn't. But, now we have. Here's
Lenin's 1919 pamphlet A
Great Beginning: Heroism of the Workers in the Rear. "Communist
Subbotniks.".
July 26: ADDITION: Lenin's 1921
Preliminary
draft resolutions of the 10th Congress of the R.C.P..
July 26: ADDITION: We open the
José
Carlos Mariategui Internet Archive. It only has two small
articles at the moment, but it's a start and will hopefully introduce
some English speakers to this thinker sometimes called "the Gramsci of
the Americas."
July 24: ADDITION: Marx's June
28 1855 news article for Neue Oder-Zeitung, "Anti-Church
Movement: Demonstration in Hyde Park". It deals with the class
nature of England's pietist legislation -- and the right to drink beer
on Sunday!
July 8: ADDITION: The Fifth
Congress of the First International Working Men's Association: The
Hague Congress, 1872 -- almost completed, but still missing
documents, such as the report on Bakunin's secret Alliance.
Transcribing this historic congress is no small endeavor, to be sure...
whew.
June 24: ADDITION: Lenin's 1913
article The
Three Sources and Three Component Parts of Marxism. (Thanks
to Lee Joon Koo and Marc Luzietti)
June 17: ADDITION: Engels' 1873
series of articles Bakuninists at
Work. Engels looks at Spanish revolts in the summer of 1873,
and how the political "abstentionism" of the Bakuninists (any state is
bad) led to a confused defeat.
June 8: ADDITION: The 1919
Manchester Guardian Interview
with Lenin. (Thanks to J.J. Plant.) Also, added 1929
Lenin poster
June 7: ADDITION: 1895
biography of Engels written by Lenin. (Happy
birthday, Morgan!)
June 6: ADDITION: We're proud
to store a copy of Akama Michio's German
transcription of Das Kapital -- including chapters 1 through
11, and 17 and 23. (Thanks to Akama Michio, Hans Ehrbar, and Hinrich
Kuhls)
May 17: ADDITION: Engels' 1891
pamphlet Brentano vs.
Marx -- examining the "academic controversy" surrounding a
supposed "lyingly added" quote Marx used in the Inaugural Address of
the First International. The controversy would show that the speaker of
the quote -- Chancellor of the Exchequer and future Prime Minister
Gladstone -- actually did speak thusly, and then somehow went back and
changed Hansard (the parliamentary record). Fortunately Gladstone
couldn't rewrite the newspapers of the day. Marx was vindicated.
May 7: ADDITION: For an example
of Marx and Engels' more wicked satire, give a glance to the 1852 cult
classic Heroes of
the Exile -- an often hilarious recounting of the adventures of
the German exile community holed up in London after the 1848-49
revolutions on the continent -- and plotting great revolutions of the
future. "Light" Marx reading at its best.
May 5: ADDITION: Happy
birthday, Karl! Check out the revamped International
Working Men's Association subarchive. Loaded with new items,
too numerous to list here. Much, much more to come.
May 4: ADDITION: Engels' 1869
short
biography on Marx.
May 2: ADDITION: Leon Trotsky's
1936 Their
Morals and Ours (Thanks to David Walters.)
May Day: ADDITION: At long
last, Capital
I is done! A meaningful May Day to proletarians all around
our beautiful blue planet.
April 26: UPGRADE: Marx's
classic 1865 address Value,
Price & Profit.
April 11: ADDITION: Leon
Trotsky's 1924 Lessons
of October (Thanks to David Walters.)
April 9: ADDITION: We begin
swinging the hammers and pick axes to start the transcription of the
1894 Capital
III. Chapters 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 and 7. (Thanks to Hinrich
Kuhls.)
April 7: ADDITION: 1936 Leon
Trotsky in Norway (Thanks to Per I Mathisen.)
April 5: ADDITION: David
Riazanov's 1927 Karl
Marx and Friedrich Engels: An Introduction to Their Lives and
Work.
April 2: ADDITION: Anatoly
Lunacharsky's 1923 Revolutionary
Silhouettes.
March 29: ADDITION: Karl Marx's
"Instructions
for the delegates of the Provisional General Council. The different
questions.". Of particular interest is the section on "Trade
Unions: Past, Present and Future."
March 28: ADDITION: Another two
dozen or so editorials by Daniel
DeLeon. (Thanks to Mike Lepore.)
March 27: ADDITION: The full
text of Trotsky's 1923 The
New Course. (Thanks to David Walters.)
March 9: ADDITION: The full
text of Trotsky's Revolution
Betrayed finally completed, and adapted to HTML.
March 7: ADDITION: Anton
Pannekoek's 1912 essay on Marxism
and Darwinism (Thanks to Jon Muller). Plus, some UPGRADES: In the "Other" Archives: Lenin's State
and Revolution and a series of essays and editorials spanning
the period 1898-1907 from Daniel De
Leon. Also, ADDITION: Rosa Luxemburg's
1902 news article Martinique
(Thanks to [email protected]).
March 6: ADDITION: The Class Struggles in France,
1848-50 -- Marx's series of Neue Rheinische Zeitung news
articles, applying the new materialist interpretation found in the
Communist Manifesto to revolutionary events in France. (Thanks to
Louis Proyect.)
March 5: ADDITION: More Capital,
volume 1: Chapter 19,
20,
21,
22.
(Thanks Bill McDorman.)
February 8: ADDITION: Articles
and letters concerning the joint Marx-Ruge publication Deutsche-Französische
Jahrbücher. This one-time publication featured two
articles by Marx -- On The Jewish
Question and Contribution
to a Critique of Hegel's Philosophy of Law. Introduction, the
latter containing Marx's famous comment about religion being the opiate
of the masses -- and two by Engels -- including a review
of Thomas Carlyle's new book Past and Present and Engels
very first writing on political economy, Outlines
of a Critique on Political Economy.
February 7: ADDITION: More
Capital,
volume 1: Chapter 2.
(Thanks Bert Schultz.)
February 3: ADDITION: The
collection of (Karl's father) Heinrich
Marx's letters to his son off at university in Berlin. ADDITION: Drawing of Marx at age
18. ADDITION: Karl Marx's 1842 series of
news editorials for the Rheinische Zeitung on the Debates
on Freedom of the Press.
February 2: UPGRADE: Marx's
1844 The
Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts.
January 28: UPGRADE: A
Contribution to the Critique of Hegel's Philsophy of Right:
Introduction, On "The Jewish
Question", Critical
Notes on "The King of Prussia" and Engels' 1847 The
Principles of Communism and several smaller speeches and news
articles.
January 27: ADDITION: More
Capital,
volume 1: The entire Part 8 ("The So-Called Primitive Accumulation"),
which strips away, in a blazing fashion, the mythology of how
capitalism acquired sufficient capital to begin with. Chapters 26,
27,
28,
29,
30,
31,
32
and 33.
January 25: ADDITION: Karl
Marx's short 1872 news article on The
Nationalization of the Land. ADDITION:
More Capital,
volume 1: Chapters 16,
17.
(Thank you Allan Thurrott.)
January 22: ADDITION: Two
Engels' articles: The 1876 post-humously published The Part
Played by Labour in the Transition from Ape to Man and the 1894
On
the History of Early Christianity.
January 20: ADDITION: More
Capital,
volume 1: Chapters 7,
8,
and 9.
Also, an UPGRADE: Chapter 1
(Commodities) converted to HTML.
January 19: UPDATE: Jenny
Marx Longuet, Karl Marx's eldest daughter, bio page updated to
include an obituary by Engels (she died at age 37) and her well-written
series
of articles on Ireland, written under the pseudonym "J.
Williams" for La Marseillaise in 1870. ADDITION: Several articles Engels' wrote about the passing of
Marx.
January 17: ADDITION: Marx/Engels
SEARCH! -- Yes, a search engine, to help you navigate the
40,000 pages that comprise the collected works and letters of Karl Marx
and Frederick Engels. (Not that all 40,000 are online, of course... not
yet.) ADDITION: More Capital,
volume 1: Chapters 24
and 25
-- Chapter 25 is 304k! Whew!
January 15: ADDITION: Capital,
volume 1: Chapters 5
and 6
transcribed by Hinrich Kuhls. (Chapter 4
has been upgraded.) Bert Schultz has added a series of prefaces and
afterwords. ADDITION: Engels' 1876 biographical
series on friend and comrade Wilhelm
Wolff. (Includes shorter 1886 version.)
January 14: ADDITION: Helene
Demuth obituary
by Engels (1890).
January 13: ADDITION: The Marx and
Engels Media Interviews page. (Three new Engels interviews
added from 1890s.)
January 6: ADDITION: The Marx/Engels Internet Photo Gallery.
January 5: ADDITION: The Peasant War in Germany --
Engels' insightful 1850 history text on 16th century Germany.
January 1-3: UPGRADE: Major
overhaul of site, adding a "table of contents" page to many larger
works. New images added. Many works upgraded from straight text files
to hyper-text documents (a process which will be complete early in
'96). All new documents will be filed in HTML format.
Cyber-Marx International
To Marx/Engels Library
To Marx/Engels Internet Archive