فهرست مطالب :
Cover
VOLUME I
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
1 THE ROAD TO COMMUNISM 1820-
I Marx and Engels
II Barmen, 1820–38
III Bremen, 1838–41
IV Berlin, 1841-2
V London and Manchester, 1842–4
VI Paris, 1844
2 THE CONDITION OF THE WORKING CLASS IN ENGLAND IN 1844
I The Genesis of Engels’s Book
II Engels on the English Workers
III Engels’s Book in Germany
IV Engels’s Book in England
V The Significance of Engels’s Book
3 THE YOUNG REVOLUTIONARY 1845–1850
I The German Ideology, 1845–7
II The Communist Correspondence Committee, 1846–8
III The “Principles of Communism” and the Communist Manifesto, 1847–8
IV Revolution and Reaction, 1848–9
V Exile in London, 1849–50
4 THE MANCHESTER YEARS 1850-
I The Years of Storm and Stress, 1850–60
II The Cotton Lord, 1860–70
5 FRIENDS IN EXILE
I Wilhelm Wolff
II Georg Weerth
III Carl Schorlemmer
IV Eduard Gumpert
V Carl Siebel
VI English Friends: Julian Harney – James Leach – Ernest Jones – Edward Jones – Samuel Moore
VII The “Philistines”: Louis Borchardt – John Watts
Documents
I To the Working Class of Great Britain, 1845
II Review of Friedrich Engels, The Condition of the Working Class in England, 1845
III Introduction to the Communist Circular against Hermann Kriege, May 11, 1846
IV Letter to G. A. Köttgen of Elberfeld, June 15, 1846
V Address of the German Democratic Communists of Brussels to Mr Feargus O'Connor, 1846
VI The Status Quo in Germany, 1847
VII The Free Trade Congress in Brussels, 1847
VIII Principles of Communism, November 1847
IX Statutes of the Communist League, 1847
X Demands of the German Communist Party, 1848
SUBJECT INDEX
VOLUME II
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
6 ENGELS AND DAS KAPITAL
7 THE GENERAL
8 ENGELS AND THE WORKING CLASSES 1850–1870
I The Workers in Britain
II The Workers in France
III The Workers in Germany
9 THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL 1864-
I The Founding of the First International
II Marx and the First International, 1864-70
III The International in England
IV The International in France
V The International in Germany
VI The International and the Labour Movement
VII The International and the Irish Question
VIII Engels and the General Council, 1870-2
IX The International and the Paris Commune, 1871
X Bakunin and the International
XI The International in Spain
XII The International in Italy
XIII The Hague Congress, 1872
10 MARX AND ENGELS: THE LAST PHASE 1870-1883
11 THE CHAMPION OF MARXISM 1872-1879
I Anti-Bakunin, 1872-3
II Anti-Proudhon, 1872
III Anti-Blanqui, 1874
IV Anti-Lassalle, 1875
V Anti-Diihring, 1878
VI Anti-Höchberg, 1879
12 ENGELS AS HISTORIAN
13 ENGELS AND THE GERMAN SOCIAL DEMOCRAT PARTY 1878-1890
14 THE LEADER OF THE ORCHESTRA 1883–1895
I The Legacy of Marx
II The Father of International Socialism
Germany: The Erfurt Programme - Austria: Victor Adler - France: Paul Laf argue - Italy: Filippo Turati - Britain: Eleanor Marx - Russia: Georgi Plekhanov
III The Second International
IV Conclusion: Death of Engels, 1895, Engels Successor’s
DOCUMENTS
I Address of the Central Committee of the Communist League to the Members of the League (by Karl Marx and F. Engels, March 1850)
II Real Causes why the French Proletariat remained comparatively Inactive in December last, 1852
III A Forecast of the Prussian Victory at Sedan, 1870
IV Prussian Francs-Tireurs, 1870
V The Military Aspect of Affairs in France, February 1871
VI Letters on Historical Materialism, 1890-1894
VII Socialism in Germany, 1891-1892
VIII Can Europe Disarm? (1893)
IX Frederick Demuth, 1898
BIBLIOGRAPHY
SUBJECT INDEX