MIA > Archive > Mandel > Marxism in History
Classical German philosophy |
Industrial capitalism |
The utopian socialists |
English classical |
French revolution |
First proletarian |
French classical sociology |
Real proletarian |
Birth of the modern |
Pre-1848 |
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MARXISM |
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Dialectical materialism |
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Historical materialism |
Study/explanation |
History and theory |
Theory of the |
Theory of |
Theory of the |
1. 1837-1843: radical democracy
2. 1843-1844: from political emancipation to social emancipation
3. 1845-1847: foundations of historical materialism
4. 1848-1850: from the bourgeois revolution to the proletarian revolution ("permanent revolution")
5. 1850-1852: balance sheet of the revolutionary wave, class struggles and political struggles
6. 1853-1859: preparation of Capital
7. 1860-1867: completion of his economic work and creation of the First International
8. 1867-1883: the proletarian revolution on the march ... and the workers parties
Economic developments
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Class struggles and revolutions |
Workers’ movement |
1757: British Empire established in India after the battle of Plessey
1846: Potato famine in Ireland. 1848-1873: Expansion of industrial capitalism, free trade and competition in Britain, France, Germany, Belgium. 1854-1856: Crimean War (Tsarist Russia versus the rest of Europe) followed by the emancipation of the serfs in Russia in 1861. 1861-1867: French intervention in Mexico. 1870-1871: Franco-Prussian War and unification of Germany.
1873-1893: Generalisation of colonialism; rapid development of industrialisation in the USA, Japan, Russia Italy, Austria-Hungary. |
1776: American revolution. 1810-1824: Liberation Wars (first revolution) of Latin America against the Spanish Empire. 1830: Revolutions in France and Belgium; national insurrection in Poland; birth of the "Ju1y Monarchy" under Louis Philippe in France.
1848: Revolutions in France, Germany, Austria, Hungary, Poland, Italy. 1864-1865: Civil War (second revolution) in the United States. 1871: Paris Commune.
1886: Beginning of struggle for the eight-hour day in the United States, then around the world; May 1 becomes international day of struggle. |
1796: Babeuf and the Conspiracy of the Equals.
1819: Peterloo Massacre, near Manchester. 1828: Creation of local labour parties in Philadelphia and New York. 1831: First workers' insurrection, in Lyons. 1843: Silesian weavers' insurrection (Germany).
1863: Foundation of the General Association of German Workers by Lassalle. 1874: Dissolution of the First International. 1889-1891: Foundation of the Second International. 1895: Death of Engels. |
Last updated on 22.7.2004