The book concentrates mostly on the trials and tribulations of the revolutionary philosopher and very little on the critique of his writings, which the author defends in a few praising sentences.
Marx had charisma, and he was accepted as the star philosopher first by colleagues at the university and later in the weird and politically insignificant communist movement of the time.
An armchair revolutionary, whose apocalyptical prophecies didn’t materialise the way he thought they would, he would have been considered a minor thinker by the posterity if his writings weren’t seized by the Lenin’s Bolsheviks and used as a theoretical justification of their communist dictatorship.
After finishing his studies, he worked for a while as a journalist but the despotic regimes in Germany and France forced him to locate his family to London, where the authorities let him pursue his politics without any interference.
Here, despite his personal magnetism, he couldn’t cooperate with almost anyone except Engels, who had an incredible devotion to him. He supported financially Marx and his family until he died and even decided to have a cremation in order not to eclipse Marx’s tombstone as a place of pilgrimage.
He was an egocentric, who preferred a holiday instead of attending to his father’s funeral, fathered a child with the housekeeper and let Engels take the rap for it “ (Pg 168) Freddy has never found out, either from his mother or from General, who his father really is. Marx was continually aware of the possibility of divorce since his wife was frantically jealous. He did not love the child, and the scandal would have been too great if he had dared to do anything for him)”.
The communist propaganda claims he lived a poverty-stricken life. “(Pg 168) In fact, he belonged to the class of distressed gentlefolk, desperate to keep up appearances and unwilling to forgo bourgeois habits.
For most of the 1850s he could scarcely afford to feed his own children and vet he insisted on employing a secretary, the young German philologist Wilhelm Pieper, even though Jenny Marx was eager to do the job.
The employment of Pieper was a needless extravagance from the outset, but had been allowed to continue because Marx thought it unseemly for a chap in his position not to have a confidential secretary as well as regular seaside holidays, piano lessons for the children, and all the other costly appurtenances of respectability.
However empty his pockets, he simply refused to accept a sub-proletarian 'way of life, as he put it. What to other refugees might seem luxuries therefore became 'absolute necessities' while more imperative exigencies, such as paying the grocer, were treated as an optional extra.
If Marx was too skint to pay his own doctor, Engels might have wondered, how would he afford a fare to Germany? The question certainly occurred to his long-suffering creditors when they learned that Jenny had equipped herself with a new wardrobe of clothes for trip. Marx affected not to understand their indignation, maintaining that the daughter of a German baron 'could naturally arrive in Trier looking shabby.”
For a supporter of the proletariat, he was ridiculously proud of having married a bit of posh and found work below his status. (Pg 186) “Without his benefactor, Marx wrote, 'I would long ago have been obliged to start a "trade"'. The retching disgust represented by those inverted commas is almost audible. As it was, thanks to Engels's generosity, he could spend most of his days in the reading room of the British Museum, resuming his long-neglected study of economics.”
Conspiratorial and viciously authoritarian, Marx disliked organisations or institutions which he could not dominate. In London, we worked very little, wasted his energy in squabbles with fellow philosophers and revolutionaries (sometimes using vile ad hominem attacks, even anti-Semitic insults).
He and Engels tried to lead the First Communist International with the result that the General Council was transferred from London to New York where it died the death.
“After the dissolution of the Communist League in 1852 he had no political chores to distract him, and he dealt with the demands of the New York Tribune by subcontracting much of the work to Engels. 'You've got to help me, now that I'm so busy with political economy,' he pleaded on 14 August 1851”.
Marx wanted to revolutionise the philosophy and society and tried endlessly to find news that will confirm his apocalyptic rhetoric. Alas, all his predicted imminent revolutions did not happen - Germany, France and Britain (“the wealthiest and most modern industrial society in the world”) were not “ripe for destruction”.
Writing was his legacy, inflammatory and shocking, full of energy, but of little coherence.
His best works - The Communist Manifesto and The Capital were meant to give a “scientific” base to his apocalyptical idea – the end of the world is nigh; the proletariat will rule the world and everything will be milk and honey.
Both are known for incendiary quotes, re-used at infinitum by people who did not and will not read Marks’s works:
“History is the judge - its executioner, the proletarian.”
“Let the ruling classes tremble at a communist revolution. The proletarians have nothing to lose but their chains. They have a world to win. Workingmen of all countries, unite!”
Prone to ceaseless procrastination, he was unable to complete The Capital. Engels collected some of his writings into The Capital Part 2 and 3.
“Marx thought his new dialectical science would allow him to predict the future as well as understand the present. Yet he failed to anticipate two of the biggest developments of the 20th century—the rise of fascism and the welfare state—and wrongly believed communism would take root in the most advanced economies.
Soul-crushing in its hatred of human nature, and irritating in its misconstruing of economic maxims. Beginning with a vast oversimplification of Adam Smith's theory of value, Marx proceeds to describe, for ants, bees and other insectile collectivists, the kind of economics he wishes had evolved among humans. He then offers--via a distortion of the Hegelian dialectic, which is itself a distortion of logic--a historicist, "scientific" account of how the "proletariat" will inevitably rise and take control of the world.”
His works were not successful during his life:
“Sheer incomprehension, rather than political prejudice, may explain the muted reaction to Capital when it was published. The silence about my book makes me fidgety, 'Marx wrote to Engels in October, revealing that insomnia had begun to persecute him again.
Even some of Marx's most adoring disciples found their eyes glazing over as they tried to make sense of the obscure chapters.”
Afterlife he became a historical celebrity because of Lenin and the Bolshevik dictatorship that needed a “scientific bible” as a theoretical foundation of its regime.
And it was most of a secret bible – nobody read it. In my time in Romania, we were forced to study the “scientific socialism” at school and at university but we were only given quotes from the bearded patriarch. Even the communists couldn’t make too much sense out of his verbosity.
His place is, as he very well put it, “in the dustbin of history”.
Other than that, I enjoyed the book, minus the parts where the author makes acrobatics to defend the indefensible conspiratorial, ignorant, brutally authoritarian bearded spectre.