Introduction

The Communist Manifesto by Karl Marx

Karl MarxThe Manifesto of the Communist Party, written by Marx and Engels in 1848, begins: “A spectre is Haunting Europe – the spectre of Communism.” Today this spectre, or ghost, is once again rising.

Karl Marx

Contents

Young people in particular are asking – what is the alternative to capitalism? The Manifesto of the Communist Party, written by Marx and Engels, summarises the basic ideas of Marxism and remains an inspiration today. 

This Introduction very briefly looks at some of the most fundamental themes of the Manifesto. It attempts to address questions which have arisen in the course of modern struggles against capitalism, and against the oppression and the brutal wars which inevitably arise from capitalism.

We provide answers to some frequently asked questions about the Marxist ideas proclaimed in the Manifesto.


Links: This section is about Marx and Engels’ Communist Manifesto. For the Socialist Party’s manifesto click herewhich is updated regularly, and is not to be confused with the Communist Manifesto discussed here.

Quotes: Where quotes have links in this Introduction they link to their place in the text of the Manifesto. Click on the quotes in the Manifesto to return to your place in the Introduction, or use the back arrow on your browser.  


Genesis

Frederick EngelsThe Communist Manifesto was published on the eve of a great revolutionary turmoil that spread through Europe in 1848. It was written 70 years before the 1917 Russian Revolution first overturned capitalism. It preceded by 100 years the 1949 Chinese Revolution and the spread of so-called Communism to Eastern Europe – encompassing half the entire globe.

Frederick Engels

Revolution arose in Paris in 1848, only a few days after the publication of the Manifesto, spreading in a massive wave throughout Europe. Marx and Engels, aged 29 and 27 respectively, played their part in this revolution, and not just through written agitation. Marx had written “Philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways; the point is to change it.” (Theses on Feuerbach) When revolution arose, they participated to the full.

But Marx and Engels rejected the method of terrorism and the conspiratorial methods of some contemporary revolutionary groups seeking to carry out a coup. They discovered the special role that the working class (sometimes termed the “proletariat”) was destined to play in overthrowing capitalism.

They worked continuously to bring their ideas to the most politically advanced members of the working class. For Marx and Engels, the proclamation of the ideas that they were to reveal in the Communist Manifesto had to be intimately linked to the struggles of the working class.  They sought out the “most extreme, chiefly proletarian” secret revolutionary league – the ‘League of the Just.’ From 1843 onwards, Engels explains that he and Marx kept up:

“continuous correspondence… influenced the theoretical views of the most important members of the league by word of mouth, by letter and through the press…we also made use of various lithographed circulars…” (On the History of the Communist League, Marx and Engels selected Works, p. 440)

They convinced the League of their ideas in 1847 and immediately joined the League. The League changed its name to the Communist League. Marx founded a branch of the Communist League in Brussels, Engels attended the three Paris branches, and Marx and Engels were commissioned to draw up the Communist Manifestoto proclaim these ideas to the world.

The Manifesto’s first two chapters, Bourgeois and Proletarians and Proletarians and Communists, are reproduced here. There is a link to the third chapter on marxists.org. This introduction mainly discusses the first and second chapter. The third chapter, which raises demands and criticises political trends current in 1848, while it still acts as a guide to the method of Marxism, was contingent on the historical conditions of the time.  

Some phrases in this famous English translation have become antiquated. For instance, the translation “Working Men of all countries, unite!” today is more accurately translated as “Workers of the world unite!”