The Communist Manifesto

Front Cover
Broadview Press, 2004 M08 30 - 256 pages

L.M. Findlay’s elegant new translation is a work of textual and historical scholarship. Few books have had as much of an impact on modern history as The Communist Manifesto. Since it was first published in 1848, it has become the rallying cry for revolutionary movements around the world. This new Broadview edition draws on the 1888 Samuel Moore translation supervised by Engels—the standard English version in Marxist discourse—and on the original Helen Macfarlane translation into English of 1850.

Throughout, Findlay draws on a variety of disciplines and maintains a broad-ranging perspective. Among the appendices are Engels’ “Draft of a Communist Confession of Faith,” correspondence and journalism of Marx and Engels, ten illustrations, and eight additional influential political manifestos from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

From inside the book

Contents

Acknowledgements
9
A Note on the Text
41
The Communist Manifesto
59
From Flora Tristans Tour de France
95
Marx The Communism of the Rheinischer
112
Communist Journal No
125
Letter from Engels to Marx 2324
157
Engels On the History of the Communist
160
Engels The Labour Movement in America
180
Engels Notes On My Journey Through America
189
Manifestoes
195
Further Reading
252
Copyright

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References to this book

About the author (2004)

L.M. Findlay is Director, Humanities Research Unit at the University of Saskatchewan.

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