These twelve original essays are 'after' Marx in several senses. The
first and most obvious is the purely chronological sense: They are
written one hundred years after Marx's death. The authors are therefore
able to see more clearly what Marx did not or could not see and to see
more clearly that which he foresaw only dimly. The second sense in which
they are after Marx is political: In this century virtually all
revolutionaries call themselves Marxists and purport to apply Marx's
precepts to political practice. Armed with their different
interpretations of a nineteenth-century theory, they have altered - and
continue to reshape - the political contours of the twentieth century.
Marx raised more questions than he, or anyone else, could ever
reasonably hope to answer. To raise anew some of these questions and to
approach them in the critical spirit of Marx's own thinking, are the
common themes running through and uniting these essays.