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  1. Egoism and Class Consciousness, or: Why Marx and Engels Wrote So Much About Stirner.Tom Whyman - 2023 - Hegel Bulletin 44 (3):422-445.
    Interest in The German Ideology has largely focused on the ‘chapter’ on Feuerbach—invariably the focus of the various abridgements in which the work is usually read. But this does not reflect the weighting of the text itself, which is dominated by Marx and Engels's critique of the radical egoist philosopher Max Stirner. Which begs the question: just why did they spend so much time and effort writing about Stirner? In this paper, I will provide an answer—which comes down to three (...)
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  • The revolution party.Leo Panitch - 2017 - Constellations 24 (4):528-542.
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  • “Mere Auxiliaries to the Movement” 1 : How Intellectual Biography Obscures Marx's and Engels's Gendered Political Partnerships.Terrell Carver - 2018 - Hypatia 33 (4):593-609.
    Four women have been conventionally framed as wives and/or mistresses and/or sexual partners in the biographical reception of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels as heterosexual men. These women were Jenny Marx, Helene Demuth, Mary Burns, and Lydia Burns. How exactly they appear in the few contemporary texts and rare images that survive is less interesting than the determination of subsequent biographers of the two “great men” to make these women fit a familiar genre, namely intellectual biography. An analysis of Marx–Engels (...)
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  • The Logic Question: Marx, Trendelenburg, and the Critique of Hegel.Charles Barbour - forthcoming - Historical Materialism:1-30.
    This paper provides a reconstruction and analysis of Marx’s early engagements with logic, and especially his studies of Hegel’s logic, on the one hand, and Hegel’s great if often overlooked critic Adolf Trendelenburg, on the other. It itemises the archival evidence that Marx read and planned to compose a Hegelian response to Trendelenburg’s devastating attack on dialectics in his 1840 Logische Untersuchungen – the work that arguably did more than any other single text to destroy the influence of Hegelianism among (...)
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