Beschreibung:

XI; 466 S.; 22 cm. Originalleinen mit Schutzumschlag.

Bemerkung:

Gutes Ex.; leichte Gebrauchsspuren; Umschlag nachgedunkelt u. berieben sowie lichtrandig; innen 2 Doppelblätter lose; hs. Besitzvermerk auf Vorsatz. - Englisch. - Julius Carlebach is Reader in Sociology and Sub-Dean of the School of African and Asian Studies at the University of Sussex. ... Dr Carlebach examines and critically analyses the significance of Marx's critique of Jews and Judaism from two points of view: as a committed Jew, and as a sociologist adopting the approaches of Mannheim and Sartre. He devotes the first part of the book to a review of the struggle for emancipation by the Jews in Germany, dismissed by Marx in one sentence. Dr Carlebach isolates the factors which determined this struggle, the socio-economic forces which stimulated it, the internal revolution within the Jewish community which led to their militant demands for citizenship and the role of the state as arbiter of Jewish demands. In the second part Dr Carlebach places Marx's contribution within the context of the radicalism of his time. The views of his radical predecessors are discussed in depth but only in so far as they wrote about Jews, because that aspect of their work has so far been largely ignored. The work of men like Feuerbach, Bauer and Hess is presented at some length and Marx's responses to them is then systematically analysed. The third part of the study looks at the materialist approach to the Jewish problem, especially the attempts to create Jewish-Socialist syntheses and the various solutions offered by competing Marxist and materialist ideologies. Other chapters consider the influence of Marx's essays on Jewish writers and on sociologists like Weber, Sombart and Horkheimer. Finally, Dr Carlebach discusses Marx's contribution in relation to two major issues: the fact that Marx was of Jewish origin, and the claim that he, or his essays, or both, were anti-semitic. There is also an annotated bibliography of the literature on Marx, Jews and Judaism. ? / INHALT : ... The Radical Challenge to Jews ---- Bruno Bauer: the man-' Die Judenfrage'- ---- 'Die Fähigkeit'-the impact of Bauer ---- The Marxian Response ---- The critique of religion-the 'Deutsch- ---- Französische Jahrbücher'-on 'Die Judenfrage'-on ---- 'Die Fähigkeit'-Marx's revised critique of Judaism ---- On the Jewish Question and on the ---- Questions of Jews ---- The Quest for a Jewish-Socialist Synthesis ---- Earliest responses to Marx-Moses Hess- ---- Ber Borochov ---- Varieties of Marxist Solutions to the ---- Jewish Problem ---- Assimilationism-cultural autonomism: the ---- Bund-Leninist-Stalinist territorialism (Otto ---- Heller)-Trotskyist internationalism (Abram Leon) ---- Marx and the Sociologists ---- Max Weber-Werner Sombart-Max ---- Horkheimer ---- Marx and the Problem of Anti-Semitism Marxist Apologists Marxist Defenders Jewish Responses to Marx Karl Marx in Israel The Jewishness of Marx Marx and the Concept of Jewish Self-Hatred The Anti-Semitism of Marx and the Use of Marx in Anti-Semitism Excursus: Marx and the Jews of Jerusalem ---- (u.v.a.) ISBN 0710082797