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Review: Karl Marx: Philosophy and Revolution

This book presents a beautifully clear introduction to Marx’s thought and its Hegelian origins, says Vernon Bogdanor

September 17, 2019 13:14
Karl Marx
2 min read

Karl Marx: Philosophy and Revolution by Shlomo Avineri (Yale University Press, £16.99)

What is the secular cult of the Jews? Huckstering. What is his secular God? Money — the bill of exchange is the real God of the Jew — The chimerical nationality of the Jew is the nationality of the merchant, of the man of money in general”. Part of a Nazi tract? No, an excerpt from Karl Marx’s pamphlet, Zur Judenfrage (“On the Jewish Question”) published in 1844. 

Marx was the grandson of two rabbis, and his mother did not convert to Christianity until after his birth. He was, therefore, halachically Jewish but showed little interest in the Jewish religion or Jewish history. It is difficult, therefore, at first sight, to understand what he is doing in Yale’s series on Jewish lives. 

Shlomo Avineri, Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a world authority on Marxism, presents a beautifully clear introduction to Marx’s thought and its Hegelian origins. But the originality of his book lies in Avineri’s belief that Marx’s Jewish background left large fingerprints on his work.