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DU BOIS AND MARX, DU BOIS AND MARXISM

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2020

Michael J. Saman*
Affiliation:
Department of German, New York University
*
Corresponding author: Michael J. Saman, Department of German, New York University, 19 University Place, 3rd floor, New York, NY10003. E-mail: [email protected].

Abstract

W. E. B. Du Bois’s engagement with the thought of Karl Marx forms an important aspect of his intellectual biography, yet its contours crystallize explicitly only late in his written work, and its development prior to the 1930s remains insufficiently understood. In order to bring to light the mix of criticisms, reservations, ideals, and inspirations that shape this reception, this article explores its trajectory as exhaustively as the available documentation permits, beginning from Du Bois’s early training in economics as a university student, continuing through his increasing attention to socialism in the early 1900s and his embrace of Soviet communism in the 1920s, and culminating in the 1930s in his teaching of Marx at Atlanta University and the overtly Marxian positions he adopts in Black Reconstruction (1935).

Type
State of the Discipline
Copyright
© 2020 Hutchins Center for African and African American Research

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