Home / Social Sciences / Politics / Abraham Lincoln and Karl Marx in Dialogue

Abraham Lincoln and Karl Marx in Dialogue

AUTHOR
Price
€18.90
€21.00 -10%
Upon request
Dispatched within 15 - 25 days.

Add to wishlist

Why put Abraham Lincoln, the sometime corporate lawyer and American President, in dialogue with Karl Marx, the intellectual revolutionary? On the surface, they would appear to share few interests. Yet, though Lincoln and Marx never met one another, both had an abiding interest in the most important issue of the nineteenth-century Atlantic world-the condition of labor in a capitalist world, one that linked slave labor in the American south to England's (and continental Europe's) dark satanic mills. Each sought solutions—Lincoln through a polity that supported free men, free soil, and free labor; Marx by organizing the working class to resist capitalist exploitation.

While both men espoused emancipation for American slaves, here their agreements ended. Lincoln thought that the free labor society of the American North provided great opportunities for free men missing from the American South, a kind of "farm ladder" that gave every man the ability to become a landowner. Marx thought such "free land" a chimera and (with information from German-American correspondents), was certain that the American future lay in the proletarianized cities.

Abraham Lincoln and Karl Marx in Dialogue intersperses short selections from the two writers from their voluminous works, opening with an introduction that puts the ideas of the two men in the broad context of nineteenth-century thought and politics. The volume excerpts Lincoln's and Marx's views on slavery (they both opposed it for different reasons), the Civil War (Marx claimed the war concerned slavery and should have as its goal abolition; Lincoln insisted that his goal was just the defeat of the Confederacy), and the opportunities American free men had to gain land and economic independence.

Through this volume, readers will gain a firmer understanding of nineteenth-century labor relations throughout the Atlantic world: slavery and free labor; the interconnections between slave-made cotton and the exploitation of English proletarians; and the global impact of the American Civil War.

Author: Kulikoff Allan
Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 152
ISBN: 9780190210809
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2019

Editor's Preface

Acknowledgments

Introduction The Corporate Lawyer and the Revolutionary

The Documents:

Chapter 1 Land and Opportunity in Antebellum America

Chapter 2 Slavery as a Social System

Chapter 3 Secession and the Civil War: Lincoln, Secession and the Border States

Chapter 4 Slavery, Emancipation, and the Progress of the Civil War

Chapter 5 Emancipation and Its Discontents

Chapter 6 Marx and Lincoln on the Fruits of the Civil War

Epilogue Marx and Lincoln after the Defeat of the Paris Commune

Bibliographic Essay

Notes

Index

Allan Kulikoff is the Abraham Baldwin Distinguished Professor in the Humanities Emeritus at the University of Georgia. He is the author of several books, including The Agrarian Origins of American Capitalism.

You may also like

Newsletter

Subscribe to the newsletter to be the first to receive our new releases and offers
Your account Your wishlist