Category
page 1Historical materialism
The Communist Manifesto
1848 publication written by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels

Capital: A Critique of Political Economy
foundational theoretical text of Karl Marx
historical materialism
Marxist historiography
mode of production
Marxist term for way of producing goods
The German Ideology
manuscripts written by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in 1846
%20(cropped).jpg)
Anti-Dühring
'''''Herr Eugen Dühring's Revolution in Science (), commonly known as Anti-Dühring''', is a book by Friedrich Engels, published in 1878 and first serialised in the newspaper Vorwärts'' in 1877–1878. The work is a polemical response to the philosophical views of Eugen Dühring, a German philosopher and socialist whose ideas were gaining influence within the Social Democratic Party of Germany (SPD). In countering Dühring, Engels provided a comprehensive and accessible exposition of Marxism as a science. The book is divided into three parts—Philosophy, Political Economy, and Socialism—and became a
The origin of the family, private property and the state
book by Friedrich Engels
The Proletarian Revolution and the Renegade Kautsky
1918 essay by Vladimir Lenin
The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte
1852 essay by Karl Marx on the French coup of 1851
Ernest Mandel
Belgian economist and Marxist philosopher (1923–1995)
social formation
sociological concept
Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism
book by Vladimir Lenin
Critique of the Gotha Program
1875 document by Karl Marx
A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy
book by Karl Marx
social consciousness
consciousness shared by individuals within a society
The Civil War in France
1871 political pamphlet by Karl Marx
post-materialism
In sociology, postmaterialism is the transformation of individual values from materalist, physical, and economic to new individual values of autonomy and self-expression. The term was popularized by the political scientist Ronald Inglehart in his 1977 book The Silent Revolution, in which he discovered that the formative affluence experienced by the post-war generations was leading some of them to take their material security for granted and instead place greater importance on non-material goals such as self-expression, autonomy, freedom of speech, gender equality, and environmentalism. Ingleha
Aleksandr Udaltsov
Soviet historian (1883–1958)