Karl Marx & Class Issues Essay

Total Length: 1541 words ( 5 double-spaced pages)

Total Sources: 16

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Notwithstanding his militant stances against capitalism -- and given the "Occupy" movement in the Western societies, some of what he railed against is evident in the market today -- and his archaic promotion of communism, his theories have an important place in educational scholarship. Good debates require diametrically opposed positions, and Marx provides plenty of ammunition for the side of the argument that adopts an anti-corporate, anti-capitalist, anti-globalization position.

Works Cited

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Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell.

Elster, Jon. (1986). An Introduction to Karl Marx. New York: Cambridge University Press.

G.E.M. de Ste Croix (1999). Class in Marx's Conception of History, Ancient and Modern.
In Karl Marx's Social and Political Thought, B. Jessop and R. Wheatley, Editors. New York:

Taylor & Francis U.S..

Hook, Sidney. (1993). Karl Marx's Economics. In Karl Marx's Economics: Critical Assessments

Volume 8, J. Cunningham Wood, Editor. London, UK: Taylor & Francis.

Katz, C.J. (1999). Karl Marx on the Transition from Feudalism to Capitalism. In Karl Marx's

Social and Political Thought, B. Jessop and R. Wheatley, Editors. New York: Taylor & Francis U.S..

Lee, Stephen J. (2000). European Dictatorships, 1918-1945. London, UK: Psychology Press.

Marx, Karl, and Engels, Friedrich. (2003). The Communist Manifesto. Retrieved January 28,

2012, from http://www.bompacrazy.com.

Nordahl, R. (1999). Marx on….....

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