Richard Hamilton provides an in-depth critique of the writngs of
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels on Britain, France, and Germany.
Hamilton contends that the validity of their principal historical
claims has been assumed more often than investigated, and he
reviews the logic of their historical arguments, citing relevant
sources that challenge many of the assertions they used to build
their theory of inexorable historical change.
Although Marx emphasized the need for systematic empirical research
into historical events, he and Engels in fact relied on
impressionistic evidence to support their claims of how fault lines
were forming in capitalist society. Marxist theory, Hamilton
concludes, is poorly supported in the historical analysis supplied
by its original formulators. In showing that the historical record
points to alternative readings of the course of social, economic,
and political development in Western society, Hamilton argues that
class boundaries tend to be fluid and that major change is more
often than not the product of evolutionary -- rather than
revolutionary -- forces.
Originally published in 1991.
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