Karl Marx, his reputation long a victim of what’s been done in his name, has been viewed with new eyes by many since the global financial collapse.

The authors of two acclaimed bios published since then visit Carnegie Mellon University as part of the Marx@200 event series, meant to explore the continuing relevance of the author of Das Kapital and The Communist Manifesto.

Mary Gabriel

Mary Gabriel and Jonathan Sperber speak as part of a program titled Love, Capital and Writing Marx’s History.

Gabriel’s 2011 book Love and Capital: Karl and Jenny Marx and the Birth of a Revolution focuses on the human side of Marx, and his intellectual and romantic relationship with his wife, Jenny. Slate called the book “a page turner, an erudite, sensitive look at the world-changing man and, most of all, the overlooked women in his life, who sacrificed much happiness to help him evangelize his vision of class equality.”

Sperber’s 2013 bio, Karl Marx: A 19th-Century Life, by contrast, aimed to portray Marx as less a man for the ages than as a product of the intellectual ferment and current events of his day. According to the New York Times review, Sperber “succeeds in the primary task of all biography, recreating a man who leaps off the page.” The book even earned Sperber a spot on The Daily Show, with Jon Stewart.

Jonathan Sperber

The program, which is free, will explore how two historians can see Marx in such radically different ways.

The event begins at 7 p.m. Wed., Nov. 8, in Steinberg Auditorium, A53 Baker Hall, on the CMU campus.

It is sponsored by The CMU Humanities Center Marx@200 and the History Department.

One reply on “Karl Marx biographers speak here Wednesday”

  1. Marx was a type of Satanist before he was the communist we all know and some love. Read Richard Wurmbrand’s “Marx and Satan” (RW had an interesting connection to Marxism; he was tortured in a Soviet bloc prison for 14 years because he chose to believe and preach Jesus). He (KM) had no love for the proletariat; instead, by peeking into his earlier writings, one can see that he despised all mankind and only sought the best way to deceive them into ruining themselves and their culture. To borrow his phrase, “Marxism is the opiate of the masses.” Only those who are wide-awake aren’t lulled into its deceptively seductive call for “equality”. As Orwell wrote in Animal Farm, “All animals are equal; some are more equal.”

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