The Communist Manifesto
Edited by Samuel H. Beer, with key selections from Capital and The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, this audiobook features an especially helpful introduction that serves as a guide to Marxist political and economic theory and to placing the specific writings in their contemporary setting. I

1100038601
The Communist Manifesto
Edited by Samuel H. Beer, with key selections from Capital and The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, this audiobook features an especially helpful introduction that serves as a guide to Marxist political and economic theory and to placing the specific writings in their contemporary setting. I

9.98 In Stock
The Communist Manifesto

The Communist Manifesto

by Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels

Narrated by Joe Geoffrey

Unabridged — 4 hours, 16 minutes

The Communist Manifesto

The Communist Manifesto

by Karl Marx, Friedrich Engels

Narrated by Joe Geoffrey

Unabridged — 4 hours, 16 minutes

Audiobook (Digital)

$9.98
(Not eligible for purchase using B&N Audiobooks Subscription credits)

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Overview

Edited by Samuel H. Beer, with key selections from Capital and The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte, this audiobook features an especially helpful introduction that serves as a guide to Marxist political and economic theory and to placing the specific writings in their contemporary setting. I


Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

“L.M. Findlay’s excellent translation of The Communist Manifesto, embedded in a splendid introduction and a most carefully chosen appendix of Marx and Engels pieces, superbly places this nineteenth-century classic in an extraordinary historical context. There is no other edition at the moment that can match its quality in terms of translation, and its substance in terms of historical context.” — Renate Holub, Director, Interdisciplinary Studies, University of California, Berkeley

“Findlay engages the reader by depicting how personal and historical events shaped the thinking of Marx and Engels. At the same time, he clarifies why Marx and Engels pursue the manifesto format, explains its historical significance as a political genre, and highlights the importance of Marxist concerns in the post-industrial, post-Cold War era. Combined with the excellent array of appendices, Findlay’s translation should enrich readers’ understanding of the Manifesto’s historical context and help solidify their understanding of the fundamentals of Marxism.” — Bryon Moraski, University of Florida

“Findlay’s new edition of The Communist Manifesto is very scholarly, and the additional documents are a real bonus, providing an interesting context for the work. All in all, this is an excellent edition.” — Walter Adamson, Emory University

“A great teaching text.” — James Tully, University of Victoria

James Tully University of Victoria

"A great teaching text."

Walter Adamson Emory University

"Findlay's new edition of The Communist Manifesto is very scholarly, and the additional documents are a real bonus, providing an interesting context for the work. All in all, this is an excellent edition."

Bryon Moraski University of Florida

"Findlay engages the reader by depicting how personal and historical events shaped the thinking of Marx and Engels. At the same time, he clarifies why Marx and Engels pursue the manifesto format, explains its historical significance as a political genre, and highlights the importance of Marxist concerns in the post-industrial, post-Cold War era. Combined with the excellent array of appendices, Findlay's translation should enrich readers' understanding of the Manifesto's historical context and help solidify their understanding of the fundamentals of Marxism."

Renate Holub

"L.M. Findlay's excellent translation of The Communist Manifesto, embedded in a splendid introduction and a most carefully chosen appendix of Marx and Engels pieces, superbly places this nineteenth-century classic in an extraordinary historical context. There is no other edition at the moment that can match its quality in terms of translation, and its substance in terms of historical context."

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169698213
Publisher: Ascent Audio
Publication date: 04/01/2014
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

INTRODUCTION: THE MANIFESTO OF THE COMMUNIST PARTY FOR US

Jodi Dean

An idea whose time has come again

The importance of The Manifesto of the Communist Party nearly 200 years after it was written is surprising. It didn't begin as a powerful statement by important people. Published in 1848, the Manifesto came about after a conspiratorial London group called the League of the Just contacted Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, who had formed a network of Communist Correspondence Committees. The Central Committee of the League of the Just convinced Marx and Engels to join them in a new, more open, Communist League. The League would publish Marx's and Engels' critical communist ideas in a public statement of the League's doctrine. Marx and Engels agreed, but Marx delayed finishing the text. The Central Committee had to harass him to get the manuscript, threatening to take 'further measures' against him if he didn't deliver. Even then, the text didn't carry out the assignment: Marx produced not a manifesto specific to the League but something more, a broader statement of how communists see the world. He even changed the name, delivering not The Communist Manifesto but The Manifesto of the Communist Party, a party which didn't actually exist. In the first published version, neither the name of the group commissioning the manifesto nor those of its authors appeared on its cover. A manuscript handed in late, with no author, sponsored by no one, in the name of a non-existent party, changed the world.

The event that most profoundly registers this change is the 1917 Russian Revolution. The Bolsheviks, the more militant faction of the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party (RSDLP), led a movement of workers, soldiers and peasants in overthrowing tsarism and establishing the world's first socialist workers' republic. Just as the Manifesto predicted, the oppressed overthrew the oppressors. The class struggle at the basis of history once again resulted in the revolutionary reconstitution of society. The working class seized political power. After the revolution, the RSDLP changed its name to the Communist Party, occupying the space opened up by the Manifesto. This re-issue of The Communist Manifesto one hundred years after this revolutionary event pushes us to occupy this space again and take the perspective of revolution.

Is this a perspective we can take now? The Soviet Union dissolved in 1991. For some, this means the time of revolution has passed. They claim that capitalism and democracy won. Capitalism and democracy, blended together and practically the same, proved themselves to be better, preferable, more efficient. Communism doesn't work, we are told, handed the end of the USSR as evidence, as if history is always and forever the endless repetition of the same. Instead of revolution, we should direct our energies toward incremental changes. We should work for capitalism with a human face. We can't change the world, but we can focus on ourselves, on the self-transformation that comes from self-work, self-love, self-care. We can even resist, carving out little moments of freedom when we spit on the burger before serving it with a smile. But, the defenders of the status quo insist, there is no need here and now for socialists, much less critical communists who 'everywhere support every revolutionary movement against the existing social and political order of things.'

Don't believe it. The uprisings, demonstrations, occupations and revolts of the first decades of the twenty-first century indicate that capitalist democracy claimed victory too soon. These days the failure of the system into which capitalism and democracy have converged is clear. Dramatic increases in economic inequality have convinced millions of people across the globe of the inability of capitalism to meet basic needs for food, housing, health, clean water and education. Planetary warming, mass extinctions, sea level rise and desertification point to the capitalist system's threat to life on earth. Corporations, financial institutions and international organisations and agreements block the people from political arenas that claim to be democratic, pushing those who want to be heard onto online networks and into the streets. One hundred years since the Bolsheviks stormed the Winter Palace, political movements across the globe are taking the perspective of revolution. A new generation is returning to communism. It is an idea whose time has come again.

The communist revolutionary Nadezhda Krupskaya said that for her husband, Bolshevik leader Vladimir Lenin, 'the teachings of Marx were a guide to action'. Yet more than ten years before the Russian Revolution, the head of the German Social Democratic Party, Karl Kautsky, suggested that the Manifesto was obsolete. Kautsky admitted that the Manifesto's principles and method were correct. Yet he used those principles and method to argue that much of the Manifesto's description of bourgeois society no longer applied. The political and economic conditions of Western Europe pointed to evolution not revolution. Kautsky admitted things were different in Russia. For Russian socialists, the Manifesto remained 'the best and most reliable guide', 'a compass upon the stormy ocean of the proletarian class struggle'.

What about for us? Does it make sense to think that a text that the leading German socialist thought was outdated 60 years after its publication can provide us with a guide to action? The answer is yes – now more than ever.

Communicative capitalism

The fundamental premise of The Communist Manifesto is that economic production and circulation and the social organisation that follows from it are the basis of the politics and ideas characteristic of a particular epoch. From the perspective of political action, this means that those who are interested in revolutionary change have to begin with an understanding of the economy.

The Manifesto describes the world of nineteenth-century capitalism, what Marx refers to as the epoch of the bourgeoisie (although Engels is listed as co-author, he credited Marx for the basic ideas). Arising out of – and thereby destroying – feudal property relations, the bourgeoisie revolutionised production. 'The East-Indian and Chinese markets, the colonization of America, trade with the colonies, the increase in the means of exchange and in commodities generally, gave to commerce, to navigation, to industry an impulse never before known, and thereby, to the revolutionary element in the tottering feudal society, a rapid development.' Markets grew. Rising demand and competition pushed the development of Modern Industry. Colossal productive forces were unleashed and with them a need for ceaseless expansion. The constant revolutionising of the instruments of production came to characterise the era. Past values and practices gave way before the value of exchange.

Bourgeois society is chaotic and contradictory. Modern Industry requires armies of workers who need wages to survive, a proletariat. The more developed, complex and specialised industry becomes, the more mind-numbing and repulsive the conditions of labour: the worker 'becomes an appendage of the machine'. Livelihood, even life, is made 'more and more precarious'. The enrichment of the bourgeoisie is accompanied by the pauperisation of the proletariat: the same competition that induces the capitalist to cut wages, compels the worker to accept the reduction. Overproduction generates crises such that production becomes destruction. Crises are endemic.

The Manifesto's description of capitalist society is more accurate today than it was when it was written. The world in the twenty-first century is entirely subsumed by capitalism. The capitalist system is global. Competition, crises and precarity condition the lives of and futures of everyone on earth. No one escapes – although some have accumulated enough capital to allow them better to weather the storm than others. As of 2016, the world's richest 62 people owned as much wealth as half the world's population combined.

Unlike the time of steam engines and telegraphs, contemporary capitalism relies on global telecommunications networks. From the complex logistics that support a trade system built on the concentration of industrial production in special economic zones, to the automation and informatisation of productive processes that standardise and accelerate production while decreasing the need for human labour-power, to the high-speed networks enabling algorithmic trading, hedging and arbitrage in financial markets, to the new capacity for capital to capture the activities through which we reproduce our social lives, capitalism today has become communicative.

In communicative capitalism, capitalist productivity depends on the expropriation and exploitation of communicative processes. Communication serves capital, whether in affective forms of care for producers and consumers, the mobilisation of sharing and expression as instruments for 'human relations' in the workplace, or the contributions to ubiquitous media circuits that provide ever more data and metadata that can be stored, mined and sold. Capitalism has subsumed communication such that communication does not provide a critical outside. In the digital networks of communicative capitalism, each communicative utterance or contribution adds something to the communicative flow. Whether a post is a lie doesn't matter. Whether an article is ill-conceived is unimportant. What matters is simply that something was expressed, that a comment was made, that an image was liked and shared. Even something well-argued, true and important to a matter of real concern rarely or barely registers because the stream of contributions is endless, constant. Something else that is true and important will not just appear tomorrow but is appearing at the same time, in the same feed, making the same demands for attention. As contributions to circuits of information and affect, then, the content of our utterances is unimportant.

As the over-production of words and images intensifies and accelerates, the two merge into memes and emojis. Words are counted in word clouds, measured by number of times repeated rather than considered for what they might mean. People circulate images, unsure as to how ideas expressed in words will be interpreted or received. The decline in a capacity to transmit meaning, to symbolise beyond a limited discourse or immediate, local context, characterises communication's reconfiguration into a primarily economic form. Critique becomes indistinguishable from endorsement as the adage 'there's no such thing as bad publicity' comes to characterise all mediated interactions – at least someone was paying attention. The channels through which we communicate reward number, getting us to believe through our practices that more is better, that popularity is the standard of value. Communicative interactions thereby take on the dynamics and attributes of markets and jettison their critical capacity.

Other names for 'communicative capitalism' are information society, knowledge economy and cognitive capitalism. They designate the same formation, but each highlights something different. 'Information' points to content, although hardware, software and circulation are implied. 'Knowledge' points to combinations of content and skill (know-how and know-that). 'Cognitive' suggests a narrow range of mental operations, a new use of brain power. It is linked to the idea of 'immaterial labour', which has been criticised for ignoring physical labour, embodiment and environmental impacts. 'Communicative' underscores the relation of contemporary networked capitalism to democracy. In communicative capitalism, capitalism merges with democracy, eliminating democracy's capacity to designate a critical gap within the social field. Instead of the means by which the people collectively determine their common lives and work, the practices of free speech, criticism and discussion reinforce capitalism. Television and print blur into social media, where scandal and outrage circulate more easily than policy analyses or careful arguments. Everyday communicative exchanges – proliferating in social media – take on the same forms: memes, lists, emojis, reaction gifs and teasers.

Communicative capitalism is that capitalist system in which democratic practices and ideals of inclusion and participation merge with, enable and accelerate capitalist winner-take-all dynamics of circulation, aggregation, dispossession and accumulation. In the words of the Manifesto, our 'very ideas are but the outgrowth of the conditions of [our] bourgeois production and bourgeois property'. Linguistic, affective and unconscious being together, flows and processes constitutive not just of being human but of broader relationality and belonging, are co-opted for capitalist production. Our basic communicative activities are enclosed in circuits as raw materials for capital accumulation. Our Facebook updates and Google searches, as well as the GPS locations signalled by our mobile phones and the steps, calories and heart rates monitored by our apps, provide data that is stored, mined and sold. Communication serves as a primary means for capitalist expropriation and exploitation.

When capitalism subsumes basic communicative activities, most of us can't avoid producing for capitalism. The concept of 'circuits of exploitation' helps explain why as it draws out the paid, precarious and unpaid labour that global communication networks link together. Consider the smartphone. It is produced by factory labour, is a tool for multiple types of paid as well as precarious labour, and provides a key means through which content provided by unpaid communicative labour is generated, circulated, stored and mined. The circuit of exploitation around the smartphone links activities that take place continents apart: the extractive mining that provides the phone's raw materials, the enormous factories in which the phones are assembled, and the sleek corporate campuses where the phones are designed. Further nodes in the circuit include mobile work – work that relies on smartphones as tools for making connections and supplying content, support work – such as sales, tech-support, call centres and programming – and the work of social reproduction – communicative activities through which we build lives together with friends and family. A final node in the circuit of exploitation is e-waste, the seemingly endless mountains of outdated equipment piling up in dumps and landfills. The smartphone, then, lets us see how such radically different activities as mining, texting, sharing on social media and using apps for rides and deliveries are processes in the circuit through which capitalism intensifies competition and extracts value.

The computer scientist Jaron Lanier writes, 'We've decided not to pay most people for performing the new roles that are valuable in relation to the latest technologies. Ordinary people "share," while elite network presences generate unprecedented fortunes.' Facebook illustrates Lanier's point. Facebook has over a billion active users. We make it in common, but it does not belong to us. Critics of Facebook tend to focus on issues like bullying, addiction and, more seriously, surveillance and threats to privacy. They take the form of massive social media for granted and focus on the content, the use. By ignoring the form, they neglect how social media manifests the fact that production is always production for others. Whether affect or information, production in social media is reflexive, a production of relations. In social media, the co-operation of different individuals appears as what it is, the productive force that arises out of our combined and multiplied efforts. Rather than congealed within a commodity form that renders relations between people as relations between things, the social substance manifests itself in a clear, visceral way on Twitter, Facebook, YouTube, in all massively popular social media.

The production of the social substance that we see in Facebook and Twitter is not for itself – someone else owns it. There are a billion users and one billionaire. Facebook is explicit about this. The website declares: 'Our product development philosophy centers on continuous innovation in creating products that are social by design, which means they place people and their social interactions at the core of the product experience.' Because of property relations that allow a common product to be owned by a single person (or a corporation which, in US law, is a person), producing social relations does not enable producers to procure means of life, means of subsistence. You can't eat your friends. With social media the production of social relations is for someone else, the capitalist. We are alienated from our means of socialising even as we are completely immersed in them. The more immersed we are, the more alienated insofar as there are more hits and clicks and page views to be tracked, auctioned, sold and put back to capitalist use. On social media, alienation is less a subjective experience than it is an objective process.

(Continues…)



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