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Communist Manifesto

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 34.91
  Total Words: 8727
  Total Characters: 45573
  Number of Sentences: 430


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 20.3
  Characters per Words: 5.22


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 52.89
  Fog Scale Level: 15.05
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 10.92  

Communist Manifesto


Chapter 1 Summary: Bourgeois and Proletarians


The Communist Manifesto begins with Marx's famous generalization that "the history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles" (79). Marx describes these classes in terms of binary oppositions, with one party as oppressor, the other as oppressed. While human societies have traditionally been organized according to complex, multi-membered class hierarchies, the demise of feudalism effected by the French Revolution has brought about a simplification of class antagonism. Rather than many classes fighting amongst themselves (e.g. ancient Rome with its patricians, knights, plebeians, and slaves), society is increasingly splitting into only two classes: Bourgeoisie and Proletariat.


This state of affairs is the result of a long historical process. The discovery and colonization of the New World in the 16th and 17th centuries required new methods of production and exchange. Because of the demand for more efficient, larger scale production, the medieval guild system gave way to new methods of manufacturing, defined by the widespread use of division of labor and, with the advent of industrialization, by steam and machinery. It was the bourgeoisie‹"modern Capitalists, owners of the means of social production and the employers of wage labor" (79)‹who were the agents of these economic revolutions.


The new economic powers of the bourgeoisie led to their political empowerment. While the bourgeoisie had originally served the nobility or the monarchy, they had come in the middle of the 19th century to control the representative states of Europe. In fact, as Marx famously notes, "the executive of the modern State is but a committee for managing the common affairs of the whole bourgeoisie" (82). With this political empowerment came the destruction of the social fictions on which previous societies were based. Instead of focusing on the relationship of men to 'natural' superi...

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