The Philosophy of Art of Karl Marx
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The Philosophy of Art of Karl Marx, is notable for its originality of method in approaching the subject of Marx’s aesthetics. Far from being a mere compendium of Marx’s comments on art and literature, it treats his writing in this field as an integral part of the totality of his thought. In his complex but lucid argument Lifshitz demonstrates the relations between Marx’s changing views of art and the development of his revolutionary theory – ranging from Marx’s own early Romantic poetry to ‘Capital’. In the process the book discusses some of Marx’s comment on art, in notebooks and articles, which are still little known.-Print ed.
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The Philosophy of Art of Karl Marx - Mikhail Lifshitz
© Barakaldo Books 2020, all rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted by any means, electrical, mechanical or otherwise without the written permission of the copyright holder.
Publisher’s Note
Although in most cases we have retained the Author’s original spelling and grammar to authentically reproduce the work of the Author and the original intent of such material, some additional notes and clarifications have been added for the modern reader’s benefit.
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THE PHILOSOPHY OF ART OF KARL MARX
BY
MIKHAIL LIFSHITZ
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS 4
PREFATORY NOTE 5
CHRONOLOGY: KARL MARX, 1818-1883—[With particular reference to this book] 6
The Philosophy of Art of Karl Marx 7
I. 9
II. 15
III. 19
IV. 22
V. 26
VI. 29
VII. 31
VIII. 35
IX. 38
X. 42
XI. 48
XII. 54
XIII. 60
XIV. 70
REQUEST FROM THE PUBLISHER 73
PREFATORY NOTE
AT THE TIME OF THE OCTOBER REVOLUTION MIKHAIL LIFSHITZ WAS a homeless waif roaming the streets of Czarist Russia. Today this young man is one of the finest of Marxist critics. Transformed by a Socialist society into an enthusiastic YCLer, he was given countless opportunities for study and development. With fresh and unspoiled eyes Lifshitz explored the field of æsthetics: he studied all the outstanding theoreticians, and wrote penetrating analyses of Lessing, Hegel and Winckelmann. At the same time he studied the works of the founders of Marxism, compiling an anthology of their writings on art and literature. While imbued with this work he decided to gather together these excerpts into a systematic and unified whole—in other words to integrate the various comments of Marx and Engels on art and literature with the mighty stream of Marxist philosophy. This stupendous effort resulted in the present invaluable contribution which, without doubt, towers far above all previous attempts by innumerable writers. Today Lifshitz is not only one of the major exponents of Marxist æsthetics but one of the chief enemies of the harmful crudities of vulgar sociologism, as may be seen from the recent debates on these questions in the Soviet Union summarized in International Literature,
March, 1937.
In preparing this essay for American and English readers, the editor undertook to trace all the quotations introduced by Lifshitz (without indication of their source). Following is a key to the abbreviations used in the footnotes:
HM indicates Emile Burns, ed.: A Handbook of Marxism, New York: International: 1935.
LN indicates Franz Mehring, ed.: Aus dem literarischen Nachlass von K. Marx, F. Engels, F. Lassalle, 3 vols., Stuttgart: Dietz: 1902.
MEGA indicates V. Adoratsky, ed.: Marx/Engels. Historisch-Kritische Gesamtausgabe, Abt. I, 7 vols., Abt. III, 4 vols., Moscow: Marx-Engels-Lenin Institute: 1927-1935.
SC indicates D. Torr, ed.: Marx/Engels. Selected Correspondence, New York: International: 1936 [new ed.]
SW indicates V. Adoratsky, ed.: Karl Marx. Selected Works, Vol. 1, New York: International: 1937.
CHRONOLOGY: KARL MARX, 1818-1883—[With particular reference to this book]
1818—Born in Trier, May 5.
1835—36—Bonn University: courses in Greek and Roman mythology, Homer, etc.
1836—41—Berlin University: courses in Law, Anthropology, Euripides, etc. Hegelian studies. Joins Left Hegelians. First literary efforts [Poems, etc.]. Doctoral dissertation on the difference between Democritean and Epicurean philosophy.
1842—Doctor’s degree from the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Jena.
1842—43—Contributes to and later edits the Rheinische Zeitung
: articles on censorship, freedom of the press, etc.
1843—45—Paris. Publishes, with Ruge, the Deutsch-Französische Jahrbücher
: articles on the Jewish question, the Hegelian philosophy of law, etc.; manuscript notes on alienated labor, wages, money, Hegelian philosophy, etc. [Ökonomisch-philosophische Manuskripte (1844)
].
1845—Expelled from Paris at the instance of the Prussian government.
1845-48—Brussels. With Engels: The Holy Family, German Ideology completed. The Poverty of Philosophy. With Engels: The Manifesto of the Communist Party.
1848—Expelled from Brussels.
1848-49—Cologne. Edits the Neue Rheinische Zeitung.
1849—Expelled from Cologne.
1849-83—London.
1850—Publishes the Neue Rheinische Revue.
1852—The Eighteenth Brumaire.
1852-61—Correspondent of New York Tribune.
1857-58—Work on The New American Cyclopœdia.
1859—Critique of Political Economy.
1867—Capital, Vol. I.
1883—Marx dies in London, March 14.
The Philosophy of Art of Karl Marx
KARL MARX, THE GREATEST THINKER AND LEADER OF THE REVOLUTIONARY working-class movement, was born at a time when men’s interests had already begun to turn from literature and art to political economy and sociology.
Even the eighteenth century, that classic age of æsthetics, could not remained confined to abstractions such as the beautiful
and the sublime.
In the background of purely æsthetic discussions concerning the role of genius, the value of art, the imitation of nature, practical problems of the bourgeois-democratic movement intruded themselves with increasing insistence.
The great French Revolution marked a transition in this respect. The æsthetic period
in the development of the third estate ended at that point where the interests of the bourgeoisie were severed from the interests of society as a whole. In the course of time, the attitude of the bourgeoisie towards art became frankly practical. Problems of art were everywhere bound up with problems of business and politics; the quest for æsthetic freedom was followed by the struggle for laissez-faire and protective tariffs. And once the bourgeoisie attained political dominance, problems of history and art lost all public significance, and became the property of a narrow circle of scholars.
It was at this time that the independent revolutionary movement of the proletariat began. The working class was not concerned about the shift of social interest from poetry to prose. Quite the contrary, the sooner the beautiful
revolution could be succeeded by an ugly
one (as Marx liked to put it), the sooner the surface glamor of democratic illusions could be stripped from material interests to reveal the open class struggle, the nearer the ultimate goal of the proletarian movement. The founders of Marxism sought the secret of the exploitation of the working class in the economy of bourgeois society; and it was in the conquest of political power, in the dictatorship of the proletariat, that they found the means of its emancipation. Thus the doctrine of the historical role of the proletariat as the gravediggers of capitalism and the creators of socialist society became the distinguishing feature of Marx’s outlook, the basic content of which was, of course, his economic theory. The aesthetic period
ended with Goethe and Hegel.
Whatever the views of the founders of Marxism concerning artistic creation, they could not deal with it as extensively as the philosophers of the preceding period had traditionally done. In a sense it is no doubt to be regretted that Marx and Engels left no systematic interpretation of culture and art. However, their failure to do so only proves that the founders of international working-class solidarity were fully equal to their historical task, and concentrated all their thought and effort upon the fundamental problem of suffering and struggling humanity. The revolutionary problem of Marx and Engels consisted in finding a means of breaking away from purely ideological criticism of the social order, and in discovering the everyday causes of all manifestations of man’s activities.
In dealing with questions of art and culture, the importance of Marxist theory would be immense even if nothing were known about the aesthetic views of the founders of Marxism. Fortunately, however, this is not the case. In their works and correspondence there are many remarks and entire passages expressing their ideas on various phases of art and culture. As aphorisms, they are profound and significant, but, like all aphorisms, they admit of somewhat arbitrary interpretation.
It is at this point that the work of the scholar begins. He must connect these remarks with the general development of Marxism. Marx’s æsthetic views are integrally bound up with his revolutionary world outlook. They have more than a mere biographical significance, although for various reasons we possess only fragments of his thoughts on art. In this connection the earliest sources belong to that period of his political development which might be called the period of revolutionary democratism.
I.
ÆSTHETIC PROBLEMS OCCUPIED A CONSPICUOUS PLACE IN MARX’S early intellectual life. In his university days (1835-41) he studied, in addition to law and philosophy, the history of literature—chiefly ancient literature—as well as the classical German aestheticians. At the University of Bonn, which he entered in the autumn of 1835 as a student of criminal law, Marx devoted as much attention to the history of art and literature as to jurisprudence. He attended Schlegel’s lectures on ancient literature; he delved into ancient mythology, a subject lectured upon at that time by the famous Welcker; he studied modern art. At the University of Berlin, Marx attended only one course in the history of literature (Geppert’s lectures on Euripides, 1840-41), but his independent work in connection with creative art is of particular interest to us: among the books which he read in 1837 were Lessing’s Laocoön, Winckelmann’s History of Ancient Art and Reimarus’ Allgemeine Betrachtungen über die Trieben der Thiere. In the course of his transition to Hegelianism, Marx made a thorough study of Hegel’s Æsthetik, read, no doubt, during the summer of 1837.
Young Marx’s