Featuring an extensive, provocative introduction by historian Martin
Malia, this authorized English translation of The Communist Manifesto,
edited and annotated by Engels, with prefaces to editions published
between 1872 and 1888, provides a new opportunity to examine the
document that shook the world.
In 1848, two young men published what would become one of the defining
documents of modern history, The Communist Manifesto. It rapidly
realigned political faultlines all over the world and its aftershock
resonates to this day. In the many years since its publication, no other
social program has inspired such divisive and violent debate. Ever since
the collapse of the Soviet Union, the world's first regime to adopt the
Manifesto's tenets, historians have debated its intent and its impact.
In the current era of market democracy in Russia and Eastern Europe,
nationalism on every continent, and an ever tightening global economy,
does the specter of Communism still haunt the world? Were the seeds of
Communism's ultimate destruction already planted in 1848? Is there
anything to be learned from Marx's envisioned utopia?
With an Introduction by Martin Malia
and an Afterword by Stephen Kotkin