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KARL MARX

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84 <strong>KARL</strong> <strong>MARX</strong>: A BIOGRAPHY<br />

and already development in social circumstances and political theory<br />

make this point of view itself antiquated or at least problematical. 84<br />

Marx then summarised the contrast he had been elaborating between<br />

France and Germany:<br />

In France it is enough that one should be something in order to wish<br />

to be all. In Germany one must be nothing, if one is to avoid giving<br />

up everything. In France partial emancipation is the basis of universal<br />

emancipation, in Germany universal emancipation is a sine qua non of<br />

every partial emancipation. In France it is the reality, in Germany the<br />

impossibility, of a gradual liberation that must give birth to total freedom.<br />

In France every class of the people is politically idealistic and is<br />

not primarily conscious of itself as a particular class but as a representative<br />

of general social needs. The role of emancipator thus passes in a<br />

dramatic movement to different classes of the French people until it<br />

comes to the class which no longer brings about social freedom by<br />

presupposing certain conditions that lie outside mankind and are yet<br />

created by human society, but which organizes the conditions of human<br />

existence by presupposing social freedom. In Germany, on the contrary,<br />

where practical life is as unintellectual as intellectual life is unpractical,<br />

no class of civil society has the need for, or capability of, achieving<br />

universal emancipation until it is compelled by its immediate situation,<br />

by material necessity and its own chains. 85<br />

This passage shows the importance of Marx's study of the French<br />

Revolution in the formation of his views. The Rhineland - where he was<br />

born and spent his early life - had been French until 1814, and had<br />

enjoyed the benefits of the French Revolution where civil emancipation<br />

was a genuine experience and not a possession of foreigners only, to be<br />

envied from afar. To all German intellectuals the French Revolution<br />

was the revolution, and Marx and his Young Hegelian friends constantly<br />

compared themselves to the heroes of 1789. It was his reading of the<br />

history of the French Revolution in the summer of 1843 that showed<br />

him the role of class struggle in social development. 86<br />

Approaching the conclusion of his article, Marx introduced the denouement<br />

with the question: 'So where is the real possibility of German<br />

emancipation?' His answer was:<br />

... in the formation of a class with radical chains, a class in civil society<br />

that is not a class of civil society, the formation of a social group that<br />

is the dissolution of all social groups, the formation of a sphere that has<br />

a universal character because of its universal sufferings and lays claim<br />

to no particular right, because it is the object of no particular injustice<br />

but of injustice in general. This class can no longer lay claim to a<br />

historical status, but only to a human one. It is not in a one-sided

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