Basics, Part 4a
Socialism, Utopian and Scientific
The attached text (also downloadable via link below) is “Socialism, Utopian
and Scientific”, by Frederick Engels.
By Utopian, Engels meant imaginary, or ideal, and typical of
the early socialists such as Robert
Owen, Henri de Saint-Simon, and François Fourier (who was the
historical inventor of the word “feminism”, among other things). Marx and
Engels respected these pioneers but also distinguished themselves critically from
them. The third part of the third section of the Communist Manifesto of 1848 is
devoted to them.
In the previous post we had Lenin’s “The Three Sources and
Three Component Parts of Marxism”. “Socialism, Utopian and Scientific” has a
similar three-part structure, and there is another work of Lenin’s (written as
an entry for an encyclopedia) called “Karl Marx, A Brief Biographical Sketch with an
Exposition of Marxism”, of a length that is intermediate between the
two we have given, with a similar structure. That one might be the more “basic”
text, but Engels’ work is the real classic.
Frederick Engels begins “Socialism, Utopian and
Scientific” (see the link below), with the Great French Revolution that
started in 1789. From this point on we can meet, in their developed form, the
class protagonists who allied and clashed from that time onwards until now, in
all possible permutations: alliances holy and unholy, strategic and tactical,
marriages of convenience and marriages made in heaven.
These classes were the feudal aristocrats; the peasants; the
bourgeoisie; and the proletariat.
Engels’ work has the additional benefit of introducing the
rudiments of political philosophy, and leading our thoughts towards the “democratic bourgeois republic”,
which is at one and the same time the highest form of political life before
socialism, the prerequisite of concerted proletarian action, and a form of the
State that has to be achieved, transcended and then left behind.
Those in need of an occasional quick, brief revision of the
theory of socialism and communism might like to save these three texts, and
read them again from time to time. Naturally, the same applies to all of the
work used in this “basics” course.
There is no great need to search for modern summaries of the
classics, when the masters have provided very good summaries of their work,
themselves.
- The above is to introduce the original reading-texts: Socialism, Utopian and
Scientific, Engels, 1880, Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3.