In 1875 a unification congress was held in Gotha between Lassalle's
ADAV party and that of Eisenach, which led to the drawing up of a
programme, the famous Gotha programme. In fact, it was a victory for
Lassalle's ideas, to the great fury of Marx. This congress even ended with
a song sung by the congress participants, the “Marseillaise of the
Workers”, which said among other things: “We are following the
audacious path traced out for us by Lassalle”, which must have made
Marx suffocate with rage.
They're both called the workers marseillaise. German worker was added later to distinguish between the two as the later Russian one grew more popular internationally.
Edit: just finished reading the interview, it was very good and covered some ground I haven't seen covered before despite spending well over a decade reading Marx and about Marx.
I've just read your comment, a bit belatedly.
I would be very interested to know what ground my interview covered that you didn't know before. It would perhaps give me an insight into the different 'readings' of Marx in France and in the English-speaking world.
I've just read your comment, a bit belatedly.
I would be very interested to know what ground my interview covered that you didn't know before. It would perhaps give me an insight into the different 'readings' of Marx in France and in the English-speaking world.
Comments
Quote: In 1875 a unification
Two different songs:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deutsche_Arbeiter-Marseillaise
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Worker's_Marseillaise
Of course it's the first of these that Berthier means to refer to.
They're both called the
They're both called the workers marseillaise. German worker was added later to distinguish between the two as the later Russian one grew more popular internationally.
Edit: just finished reading the interview, it was very good and covered some ground I haven't seen covered before despite spending well over a decade reading Marx and about Marx.
I've just read your comment,
I've just read your comment, a bit belatedly.
I would be very interested to know what ground my interview covered that you didn't know before. It would perhaps give me an insight into the different 'readings' of Marx in France and in the English-speaking world.
I've just read your comment,
I've just read your comment, a bit belatedly.
I would be very interested to know what ground my interview covered that you didn't know before. It would perhaps give me an insight into the different 'readings' of Marx in France and in the English-speaking world.