An Unfinished Revolution: Karl Marx and Abraham Lincoln by Abraham Lincoln
English | May 16, 2011 | ISBN: 1844677222 | 272 Pages | PDF | 4 MB
Karl
Marx and Abraham Lincoln exchanged letters at the end of the Civil War.
Although they were divided by far more than the Atlantic Ocean, they
agreed on the cause of "free labor" and the urgent need to end slavery.
In his introduction, Robin Blackburn argues that Lincoln's response
signaled the importance of the German American community and the role of
the international communists in opposing European recognition of the
Confederacy.
The
ideals of communism, voiced through the International Working Men's
Association, attracted many thousands of supporters throughout the US,
and helped spread the demand for an eight-hour day. Blackburn shows how
the IWA in America-born out of the Civil War-sought to radicalize
Lincoln's unfinished revolution and to advance the rights of labor,
uniting black and white, men and women, native and foreign-born. The
International contributed to a profound critique of the capitalist
robber barons who enriched themselves during and after the war, and it
inspired an extraordinary series of strikes and class struggles in the
postwar decades.
In
addition to a range of key texts and letters by both Lincoln and Marx,
this book includes articles from the radical New York-based journal
Woodhull and Claflin's Weekly, an extract from Thomas Fortune's classic
work on racism Black and White, Frederick Engels on the progress of US
labor in the 1880s, and Lucy Parson's speech at the founding of the
Industrial Workers of the World.
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An Unfinished Revolution: Karl Marx and Abraham Lincoln
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