Skip to main content
Article
How the Academy Looks at Marx is all Wrong, the Point However is to Change It
Class, Race and Corporate Power
  • Daniel Skidmore-Hess, Georgia Southern University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2020
DOI
10.25148/CRCP.7.2.008923
Disciplines
Abstract

In what follows, I note how two standard contemporary reference works describe Marx and then contrast those to Marx’s “auto-bibliography” which presents a different set of texts as important to the author’s self-conception. I then focus on one of the latter set of texts and suggest an approach to understanding Marx that emphasizes his identity as a revolutionary theorist and which, perhaps helps us better understand why he did not give priority to working out a theory of the state in a traditional theoretical manner. At the very least, I hope that this discussion will draw attention to the priority that Marx gave to his revolutionary commitment, a priority that may become neglected when Marxist thought and scholarship is detached from political practice.

Copyright
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Creative Commons License
**Select License for Reuse**
Citation Information
Daniel Skidmore-Hess. "How the Academy Looks at Marx is all Wrong, the Point However is to Change It" Class, Race and Corporate Power Vol. 8 Iss. 1 (2020)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/daniel-skidmore-hess/33/