The Communist Manifesto and Other Writings by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, some translated by H. J. Stenning and Samuel Moore
Translations appear to have come from KARL MARX: SELECTED ESSAYS
"Communist Manifesto" (1888 translation by Samuel Moore )
"A Criticism of the Hegelian Philosophy of Right" -1843, intro published in 1844
"On the King of Prussia and Social Reform" 1844
"Moralizing Criticism and Critical Morality: A Polemic Against Karl Heinzen" 1847
"Proudhon" (from Holy Family, 1844)
"French Materialism" (from Holy Family, 1844)
"The English Revolution" (1850)
This collection has the real Communist Manifesto and some additional essays by Marx. The topics do not quite seem so revolutionary today. Neither do they sound hugely Marxist in the modern view. The communism of these writings expects a more gradual change that will be inevitable. Classes of people have found themselves as mere cogs and want to assert general rights. What is the best way to go about doing it?
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