young marx

Brain 2022-11-25 16:16:03

The opening of this film is very exciting. Those poor people are forced to make a living and go to the forest to pick up dead wood branches, which is defined as theft and hunted down as well as cutting down trees. In today's view, this is incomprehensible, but it just reflects the social status quo of exploitation and oppression at that time, and the people were miserable. At the same time, it also contradicts Proudhon's explanation later that theft is the stealing of other people's property. It satirizes that most of the philosophers in the society at that time only spoke empty words, took it for granted to define a thing, and never thought deeply about the social status quo of the investigation. And this shows the greatness of Marx's cause.

What touched me most about this film was the relationship between Max and Jenny. Marx is a great man. He has always been committed to changing the rotten society at that time and liberating the bound toilers. He has devoted countless efforts to this end. But his great career is inseparable from the support of his wife, Jenny. Jenny is also a great woman. As a noble lady, she resolutely abandoned the wealthy life and lived a life of displacement with Marx. How hard it must have been for her to be deported from Paris with Marx when she was pregnant, but she still smiled. When Marx wanted to go to England to reconcile with Engels but gave up, she smiled and persuaded Marx to go to England and devote himself to his career, and she stayed to take care of the children. Behind almost every great man is the silent support of his family. Kudos to those great people and their families.

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The Young Karl Marx quotes

  • Pierre-Joseph Proudhon: [to Marx] Do not be like Luther who, after destroying Catholic dogma, founded an equally intolerant religion.