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July 1999


New life for Marx's works



by Kevin Anderson

The demise of Marx, at least the rich body of his writings, has been greatly exaggerated. In December 1998, the first post-Communist volume of the MARX-ENGELS GESAMTAUSGABE (Complete Writings or MEGA) came off the press at Akademie Verlag in Berlin. A number of leading newspapers and magazines, especially German ones, reported this event, but it has unfortunately not yet received much attention in the English-speaking world.

The just-published Volume IV/3, comprising Marx's 1844-47 excerpt notebooks, will be of great interest to those looking into the period between the 1844 MANUSCRIPTS and the GERMAN IDEOLOGY (1846) as well as the COMMUNIST MANIFESTO (1848). Vol. IV/3 contains some 400 pages of Marx's excerpts from and commentary on leading political economists of the time such as Louis Say, Jean Charles, Leonard Sismondi, Charles Babbage, Andrew Ure, and Nassau Senior.

All of the material is here published in the original languages in which Marx wrote it. In this volume, much of the text is in French. The editors' notes, introductions, indexes, and other background material comprise an additional 400 pages, all in German.

In their general introduction to the volume, its editors-Georgi Bagaturia, Lev Churbanov, Olga Koroleva, and Ludmila Varina of Moscow, working together with Jürgen Rojahn of Amsterdam-have analyzed these early explorations by Marx into both economic theory and the effects of capitalism on workers.

They have also taken care to show that Marx's interests are far broader than is generally realized. For example, they point out that "Marx takes up Sismondi's critique of colonialism," including references to Britain's infamous Opium Wars against China (p. 467).

They also note that, at another point, Marx connects his critique of private property to one of the family when he writes: "Should private property exist? Should the family exist?" (p. 471). Other notes by Marx on economist Pierre de Boisguillebert are related to what we know today as the 1844 MANUSCRIPTS.

The new MEGA began to appear in 1975 in the former East Germany. (The first MEGA, begun in Soviet Russia during the 1920s, was killed off a decade later by Stalin's purges-for background see my earlier article, "Uncovering Marx's Yet Unpublished Writings," N&L, January-February 1997.) Between 1975 and 1991, some 47 volumes appeared, with Vol. IV/3 in 1998 the 48th one. The total number of volumes projected stands at 122.

In 1999, we can look forward to the publication of two more volumes. Vol. III/9 will comprise letters to and from Marx and Engels in 1858 and 1859. Vol. IV/31 is to include excerpt notebooks after 1879 by Marx on chemistry and by Engels on natural science and history.

After the collapse of Communism, funding for the MEGA dried up. New but more limited funding has since been obtained from Western foundations. At the same time, editorial standards have been raised and all political party controls eliminated. The near secrecy surrounding the editing process has been removed, permitting open debate on these matters for the first time since the 1920s. As part of the current work on the MEGA, a new journal, MEGA-STUDIEN, has been established.

Funding, especially for the editorial teams working in Moscow, has become very precarious recently, however. If this funding cannot continue, the work on some 19 MEGA volumes might have to be suspended. One of the ways that people can support the work of the MEGA is by getting university and public libraries to purchase it. The International Marx-Engels Foundation based in Amsterdam, which oversees the work as a whole, can also accept donations from individuals or groups.

To purchase copies of the MEGA or to receive their brochure, contact the publisher: Akademie Verlag, Palisadenstrasse 40, D-10243 Berlin, FAX 49-30-42200611; email: info@akademie-verlag.de

To donate funds to the MEGA or to subscribe to MEGA-STUDIEN (56 DM, or about $35 per year), contact the International Marx-Engels Foundation (IMES), c/o Dr. Jürgen Rojahn, International Institute of Social History, Cruquiusweg 31, AT-1019 Amsterdam, The Netherlands. Or email: jro@iisg.nl



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