No Woman, No Revolution, Part 1
Family, Property, State
Origin of
the Family, Private Property and the State
Karl Marx was a philosopher
by training, and a writer all his life. But the only full work he ever wrote
about philosophy was his doctoral thesis on the Ancient Greek philosopher,
Epicurus, several years before the birth of Marxism.
Marx’s working life was
dedicated to the restoration of humanity to itself. This was the motivation for
his greatest work, “Capital”. Marx regarded the relation between men and women
to be the essence of humanity. He never wrote a book about it, but in his
papers at the time of his death in 1883 were the notes that his friend Engels
quickly turned into “The Origin of the Family, Private
Property and the State”. And this book turns out to be, not only
original, but indispensable.
August Bebel’s book “Woman
and Socialism” came out five years earlier, in 1879, but it is not a
satisfactory starting point. Engels’ “Origin of the Family” on the other hand,
has constant relevance. It describes women’s place in society in the complete
context of the origin of property, class struggle, and the instrument that
defends property and dominates class struggle: The State.
The special contribution of
“The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State” is that it shows the
common, interdependent origin of private property and the State; the fall of
the women into the oppressive condition which they subsequently continued to
suffer; and the institutions of money, writing and law. This original, revolutionary
break marked the end of pre-history and the beginning of history, which as Marx
and Engels had noted at the beginning of the Communist Manifesto of 1848, was
from that time on “a history of class struggles”.
The transition from
prehistoric communism took place a long time ago in some parts of the world. In
Egypt and Mesopotamia (Iraq) it may have happened more than five thousand years
ago. In most other parts it was a much more recent phenomenon, and in some
places the fall of the women may in some ways still not yet be complete.
The simultaneous nature of
the triple catastrophe (property, state and downfall of women) means that the
remedy in all three matters will likewise have to be simultaneous, meaning also
that:
The urgent abolition or
“withering away” of the State is a woman’s issue. The socialist project is a
woman’s project.
Communism is a necessity for
women. The reversal of the downfall of the women can only be achieved by the
simultaneous abolition of property and the State. Likewise, the abolition of
property and the State cannot be achieved without the conscious restoration of
women to their proper place in human society. All three goals have to be
achieved together. The three goals are actually the same goal, and the name of
it is communism.
This, the beginning of the
course, therefore also provides the conclusion of the course: that there is no
liberation available to working women under capitalism. Communism is where the
contradictions will be resolved.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Engels, Origin of
the Family, Private Property and the State, C9, Barbarism and Civilisation.
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