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This is the 19th century... | 0:00:07 | 0:00:09 | |
..a pivotal, tumultuous age that witnessed | 0:00:11 | 0:00:15 | |
revolutions in industry, technology and politics... | 0:00:15 | 0:00:19 | |
..but also, crucially, in ideas - big, bold, dangerous ideas that | 0:00:25 | 0:00:30 | |
would bring the world as we know it kicking and screaming into being. | 0:00:30 | 0:00:33 | |
Three great thinkers led the way - Karl Marx, Friedrich Nietzsche | 0:00:36 | 0:00:42 | |
and Sigmund Freud. | 0:00:42 | 0:00:44 | |
They lived in a time when old certainties were breaking down, | 0:00:44 | 0:00:48 | |
regimes were overthrown by mass uprisings, | 0:00:48 | 0:00:52 | |
science was undermining religious authority. | 0:00:52 | 0:00:55 | |
Their challenge was to figure out what makes us | 0:00:56 | 0:00:59 | |
human in a fast-evolving world. | 0:00:59 | 0:01:02 | |
Emigres, recluses, enemies of the state - these outsiders | 0:01:02 | 0:01:07 | |
challenged the existential crisis of their age head-on. | 0:01:07 | 0:01:11 | |
Little was out of bounds. | 0:01:12 | 0:01:14 | |
They had an absolute commitment to identify the forces | 0:01:15 | 0:01:18 | |
controlling our lives. Their weapon - the power of their minds. | 0:01:18 | 0:01:23 | |
Their search drove them to extremes, into poverty, into madness. | 0:01:25 | 0:01:30 | |
Yet their penetrating, often contentious, ways | 0:01:32 | 0:01:36 | |
of seeing the world still shape how we make sense of our lives today. | 0:01:36 | 0:01:41 | |
# Arise, ye starvelings, from your slumbers | 0:01:49 | 0:01:53 | |
# Arise, ye criminals, of want | 0:01:53 | 0:01:57 | |
# For reason in revolt now thunders | 0:01:57 | 0:02:02 | |
# And at last ends the age of cant... # | 0:02:02 | 0:02:07 | |
Of all the great historical figures buried in Highgate Cemetery, | 0:02:07 | 0:02:11 | |
there's one who continues to divide opinion like no other. | 0:02:11 | 0:02:15 | |
# The Internationale. # | 0:02:15 | 0:02:19 | |
For those who come here year in, | 0:02:19 | 0:02:21 | |
year out to mark the day of his death, Karl Marx is a keenly | 0:02:21 | 0:02:25 | |
intelligent analyst of capitalism, a prophet of human emancipation. | 0:02:25 | 0:02:31 | |
But for others, who've actually attacked this monument with | 0:02:31 | 0:02:34 | |
paints, with hacksaws, even with explosives, | 0:02:34 | 0:02:37 | |
he's a maligned progenitor of totalitarian regimes, | 0:02:37 | 0:02:41 | |
a man responsible for the death of millions. | 0:02:41 | 0:02:44 | |
Love him or loathe him, what you cannot dispute is that | 0:02:46 | 0:02:51 | |
Karl Marx dramatically transformed our world. | 0:02:51 | 0:02:55 | |
Within 70 years of his death, one third of the world's population | 0:02:59 | 0:03:04 | |
was ruled by governments claiming Marxism as their doctrine. | 0:03:04 | 0:03:08 | |
TRANSLATION: | 0:03:08 | 0:03:12 | |
Ura! | 0:03:12 | 0:03:13 | |
CHEERING | 0:03:13 | 0:03:15 | |
Marxist ideology claimed to be liberating but led to dreadful | 0:03:15 | 0:03:19 | |
suffering and brought superpowers to the brink of Armageddon. | 0:03:19 | 0:03:24 | |
-ARCHIVE: -It shall be the policy of this nation to regard any | 0:03:24 | 0:03:27 | |
nuclear missile launched from Cuba as an attack by | 0:03:27 | 0:03:31 | |
the Soviet Union on the United States. | 0:03:31 | 0:03:34 | |
Communism was widely discredited, | 0:03:34 | 0:03:36 | |
precipitating its fall in the 1980s and '90s. | 0:03:36 | 0:03:39 | |
But economic crisis | 0:03:40 | 0:03:42 | |
and social unrest have put Marx's ideas back in the spotlight. | 0:03:42 | 0:03:47 | |
I want to start at the beginning, not to study Marx | 0:03:50 | 0:03:54 | |
with the hindsight of history, | 0:03:54 | 0:03:55 | |
but to try to understand what motivated him | 0:03:55 | 0:03:58 | |
in the context of his own times, to discover how a man, | 0:03:58 | 0:04:02 | |
whose life was plagued with insecurities, with failure, | 0:04:02 | 0:04:06 | |
with tragedy, would end up generating | 0:04:06 | 0:04:10 | |
one of the most influential ideologies in the human experience. | 0:04:10 | 0:04:14 | |
We tend to think of Marx as a rather imposing, | 0:04:29 | 0:04:32 | |
greybeard figure staring out sternly from Soviet propaganda, | 0:04:32 | 0:04:38 | |
but this early image of the young Marx - dashing, dapper, privileged - | 0:04:38 | 0:04:44 | |
offers a rather different story. | 0:04:44 | 0:04:46 | |
His birthplace, Trier, was an elegant Rhineland town, | 0:04:49 | 0:04:54 | |
now part of modern Germany. | 0:04:54 | 0:04:55 | |
Born in 1818 to upwardly mobile parents in this handsome building, | 0:04:57 | 0:05:02 | |
Marx's childhood was, on the face of it, | 0:05:02 | 0:05:05 | |
pretty idyllic and thoroughly bourgeois. | 0:05:05 | 0:05:08 | |
But one day, when Marx was just 15, his father, Heinrich, | 0:05:11 | 0:05:15 | |
met with a group of respected public figures here at Trier's Casino Club. | 0:05:15 | 0:05:21 | |
After too much to drink, some of them | 0:05:27 | 0:05:29 | |
began pounding the tables raucously | 0:05:29 | 0:05:31 | |
and singing songs that celebrated the virtues of the great revolution | 0:05:31 | 0:05:37 | |
that swept through neighbouring France. | 0:05:37 | 0:05:39 | |
A Prussian army officer witnessed the scene and reported back. | 0:05:42 | 0:05:48 | |
Two of Marx's schoolteachers, who were also in the room, | 0:05:48 | 0:05:51 | |
were promptly sacked. | 0:05:51 | 0:05:53 | |
Others were charged with subversion | 0:05:53 | 0:05:55 | |
and Marx's father was tarnished with the disgrace. | 0:05:55 | 0:05:59 | |
The casino was put under surveillance. | 0:05:59 | 0:06:02 | |
Because under the surface calm of the town there was tension. | 0:06:05 | 0:06:08 | |
Not long before Karl's birth, Trier had been under Napoleonic control, | 0:06:11 | 0:06:15 | |
which meant that people like Karl's father had got | 0:06:15 | 0:06:18 | |
a taste of the French revolutionary principles of | 0:06:18 | 0:06:21 | |
individual liberty and equality. | 0:06:21 | 0:06:23 | |
Under French law, Heinrich had been free to train as a lawyer, | 0:06:25 | 0:06:29 | |
but he was Jewish and, once the more autocratic Prussians | 0:06:29 | 0:06:32 | |
were in control, they imposed civil restrictions on all Jews. | 0:06:32 | 0:06:37 | |
Now, in order to keep practising his profession, | 0:06:37 | 0:06:40 | |
he had to convert to Christianity. | 0:06:40 | 0:06:42 | |
Marx was growing up in a period | 0:06:45 | 0:06:47 | |
when questions of political authority | 0:06:47 | 0:06:49 | |
and freedom of expression were highly contested, | 0:06:49 | 0:06:53 | |
when ruling classes across Europe feared their people would | 0:06:53 | 0:06:57 | |
rise up and overthrow them. | 0:06:57 | 0:06:59 | |
The struggle between the ideals of the French Revolution | 0:07:01 | 0:07:04 | |
and the intractable conservatives of the Prussian State would | 0:07:04 | 0:07:08 | |
inspire and motivate Marx. | 0:07:08 | 0:07:12 | |
And from an early age, it was pretty clear where his allegiance lay. | 0:07:12 | 0:07:15 | |
When he was 17, Marx was packed off down the Moselle River | 0:07:24 | 0:07:28 | |
to study law at Bonn University. | 0:07:28 | 0:07:30 | |
SHIP HORN BLARES | 0:07:32 | 0:07:35 | |
There was clearly something of the hell-raiser about the teenage Marx. | 0:07:39 | 0:07:43 | |
He quickly became co-president of the Trier Tavern Club - | 0:07:43 | 0:07:48 | |
basically a bunch of middle-class bad boys. | 0:07:48 | 0:07:51 | |
After one night of boozy brawling, Marx was banged up | 0:07:54 | 0:07:57 | |
in the local cells for a day, but there was more to come. | 0:07:57 | 0:08:01 | |
Student life was divided along class | 0:08:05 | 0:08:08 | |
and political lines to the point of conflict. | 0:08:08 | 0:08:11 | |
The liberal Trier Tavern boys attracted | 0:08:11 | 0:08:13 | |
the attention of a gang of aristocratic cadets. | 0:08:13 | 0:08:17 | |
Those cadets forced them to kneel down and swear their allegiance | 0:08:17 | 0:08:21 | |
to the Prussian aristocracy, and the confrontations escalated. | 0:08:21 | 0:08:26 | |
At one point, | 0:08:26 | 0:08:27 | |
Marx ended up in a dual with a sabre wound above his eye - | 0:08:27 | 0:08:31 | |
a scar which this young scrapper wore as a badge of honour. | 0:08:31 | 0:08:35 | |
Enough, it seems, was enough for Marx's father. | 0:08:37 | 0:08:40 | |
Heinrich transferred Karl to the more studious environment of Berlin University. | 0:08:48 | 0:08:53 | |
Yet even here, Marx found other distractions. | 0:08:54 | 0:08:57 | |
Marx met a group of Bohemian students and lecturers who loved | 0:09:04 | 0:09:08 | |
to discuss the philosophies of the day late into the night. | 0:09:08 | 0:09:12 | |
He grew a beard and joined the Young Hegelians, | 0:09:12 | 0:09:15 | |
A group obsessed with the theories of a university professor who'd recently died. Georg Hegel. | 0:09:15 | 0:09:23 | |
Marx describes his first encounter with Hegel | 0:09:27 | 0:09:31 | |
as one of a completely extraordinary moment. | 0:09:31 | 0:09:34 | |
He says that when he read Hegel | 0:09:34 | 0:09:37 | |
it was like the curtain had fallen from his eyes. | 0:09:37 | 0:09:39 | |
And what is it about Hegel? | 0:09:39 | 0:09:41 | |
What's particularly exciting about his ideas? | 0:09:41 | 0:09:43 | |
Berlin is awash with Hegelian ideas | 0:09:43 | 0:09:46 | |
but perhaps the most important idea of Hegel's that they are completely | 0:09:46 | 0:09:50 | |
captivated by is the idea of history as this gradual | 0:09:50 | 0:09:54 | |
unfolding of freedom and of reason. | 0:09:54 | 0:09:57 | |
And this gradual dialectic, as he called it, | 0:09:57 | 0:10:01 | |
was made manifest most magnificently in the French Revolution when, | 0:10:01 | 0:10:07 | |
of course, you had a literal | 0:10:07 | 0:10:09 | |
cracking open of freedom and of reason. | 0:10:09 | 0:10:13 | |
I suppose it is totally thrilling, this, isn't it? | 0:10:13 | 0:10:17 | |
Because you're being told that you're part of a big historical | 0:10:17 | 0:10:20 | |
story and that gives you a big historical | 0:10:20 | 0:10:22 | |
-and philosophical canvas to paint on. -That's right. | 0:10:22 | 0:10:24 | |
And I think that Marx does absolutely see himself | 0:10:24 | 0:10:27 | |
as kind of standing, as it were, towards the end | 0:10:27 | 0:10:31 | |
of history that had begun with the ancient philosophers, | 0:10:31 | 0:10:35 | |
who had talked about the way in which one's soul could only find... | 0:10:35 | 0:10:40 | |
..perfection if it was properly embedded in the community. | 0:10:42 | 0:10:46 | |
And do they think that Hegel's got it absolutely right? | 0:10:46 | 0:10:49 | |
Or is there a sense there's still work to do? | 0:10:49 | 0:10:51 | |
There is absolutely still work to do. | 0:10:51 | 0:10:54 | |
So they think that while Hegel had got, in his vision, | 0:10:54 | 0:10:58 | |
had got part of the way, that what they want to do is bring | 0:10:58 | 0:11:01 | |
a total revolution rather than just reform. | 0:11:01 | 0:11:04 | |
They were operating in a world where the nobility, the privileged, | 0:11:04 | 0:11:08 | |
the aristocracy were still very much in charge and they were | 0:11:08 | 0:11:12 | |
pushing up against a great kind of wall of privilege and tradition. | 0:11:12 | 0:11:17 | |
'Marx and the Young Hegelians believed that the single | 0:11:22 | 0:11:25 | |
'greatest obstacle to human progress was religion.' | 0:11:25 | 0:11:30 | |
So they set out to critique and to attack it. | 0:11:30 | 0:11:34 | |
Now, you've got to think how subversive this is. | 0:11:35 | 0:11:39 | |
Some said that the gospels of the New Testament | 0:11:39 | 0:11:41 | |
were just folktales, not divine historical truth. | 0:11:41 | 0:11:45 | |
That's really shocking. | 0:11:45 | 0:11:47 | |
Others suggested that God was an illusion | 0:11:51 | 0:11:54 | |
and that as humans we'd taken the best of our powers | 0:11:54 | 0:11:58 | |
and projected them onto a kind of fantastical fabricated being | 0:11:58 | 0:12:02 | |
who embodied our finest qualities. | 0:12:02 | 0:12:05 | |
The Young Hegelians believed that this existential separation, | 0:12:09 | 0:12:12 | |
brought about by religion, limited our human potential. | 0:12:12 | 0:12:17 | |
Only by abandoning its delusions could we truly flourish. | 0:12:17 | 0:12:21 | |
Of course, the group's iconoclastic - | 0:12:24 | 0:12:26 | |
many would say blasphemous - ideas had wider implications. | 0:12:26 | 0:12:31 | |
The relationship between Church and state | 0:12:31 | 0:12:34 | |
was tight to the point of total union. | 0:12:34 | 0:12:37 | |
Criticism of religion was tantamount to criticism of Prussia. | 0:12:38 | 0:12:43 | |
Marx had aspired to an academic career but the Prussian | 0:12:45 | 0:12:49 | |
authorities would not tolerate subversives in their universities. | 0:12:49 | 0:12:54 | |
So he had to find another platform for his ideas. | 0:12:54 | 0:12:58 | |
His outlet would be the hot, rapidly expanding business of journalism. | 0:12:59 | 0:13:05 | |
Marx thought that the written word had transformative power. | 0:13:13 | 0:13:18 | |
And he became editor of the Rhineland News, based in Cologne. | 0:13:18 | 0:13:22 | |
A mouthpiece for liberal entrepreneurs | 0:13:23 | 0:13:26 | |
pushing for constitutional reform. | 0:13:26 | 0:13:28 | |
He made an immediate impact. | 0:13:29 | 0:13:32 | |
Nicknamed "the Moor" because of his dark complexion | 0:13:34 | 0:13:37 | |
and thick mane of hair and beard, it seems he was impetuous, | 0:13:37 | 0:13:41 | |
passionate, with a boundless energy and self-confidence. | 0:13:41 | 0:13:45 | |
Although some did say he was vindictive | 0:13:45 | 0:13:48 | |
and an intellectual bully. | 0:13:48 | 0:13:50 | |
But whatever his shortcomings, his drive and acuity got the job done. | 0:13:50 | 0:13:55 | |
Under his tenure, circulation of the paper rose dramatically. | 0:13:56 | 0:14:00 | |
Marx's journalism took up the cause of his nouveau riche paymasters | 0:14:03 | 0:14:08 | |
and attacked the old political elite. | 0:14:08 | 0:14:11 | |
Here's a typical example of his lacerating style. | 0:14:12 | 0:14:16 | |
It's polemic, laced with a kind of withering sarcasm. | 0:14:16 | 0:14:21 | |
"The aristocracy cannot be given the form of law | 0:14:22 | 0:14:26 | |
"because they are formations of lawlessness. | 0:14:26 | 0:14:30 | |
"No-one's action ceases to be wrongful because it's his custom, | 0:14:30 | 0:14:34 | |
"just as the bandit son of a robber is not exonerated | 0:14:34 | 0:14:39 | |
"because banditry is a family idiosyncrasy." | 0:14:39 | 0:14:43 | |
It's clever, cutting stuff. | 0:14:44 | 0:14:46 | |
Marx gained notoriety through his thinly veiled attacks | 0:14:51 | 0:14:54 | |
on the Prussian ruling classes. | 0:14:54 | 0:14:57 | |
Journalism also stimulated a new interest at the other end of the social scale. | 0:14:59 | 0:15:05 | |
In 1842, Marx reported on the conditions | 0:15:05 | 0:15:08 | |
of lower class vine growers back in his home region. | 0:15:08 | 0:15:11 | |
A dramatic drop in profits had plunged them into poverty. | 0:15:13 | 0:15:17 | |
There's an unsettling poem written at the time | 0:15:19 | 0:15:22 | |
that describes how, unable to feed their children, | 0:15:22 | 0:15:25 | |
the vine growers were driven to suicide. | 0:15:25 | 0:15:28 | |
"Now the wine's blessing won't run in your barrel | 0:15:29 | 0:15:33 | |
"You won't sing a song any more when all is covered with snow." | 0:15:33 | 0:15:36 | |
The workers blamed the authorities for opening up the market | 0:15:38 | 0:15:42 | |
to greater competition. | 0:15:42 | 0:15:44 | |
The authorities' response was that a protected market | 0:15:44 | 0:15:47 | |
before had artificially inflated prices. | 0:15:47 | 0:15:50 | |
These were men and women who were really struggling. | 0:15:54 | 0:15:57 | |
Officially they were no longer allowed to collect firewood | 0:15:57 | 0:16:00 | |
for free because it was being consumed in such vast | 0:16:00 | 0:16:03 | |
quantities by the new factories. | 0:16:03 | 0:16:05 | |
They were caught in a pincer movement of progress. | 0:16:06 | 0:16:10 | |
Marx saw that the vine growers were losing what little power | 0:16:13 | 0:16:16 | |
they had to determine their own futures. | 0:16:16 | 0:16:19 | |
His journalism opened his eyes to the complex forces | 0:16:20 | 0:16:23 | |
governing our everyday lives. | 0:16:23 | 0:16:25 | |
He thought it should be possible, with scientific precision, | 0:16:27 | 0:16:31 | |
to work out what these relations are. | 0:16:31 | 0:16:34 | |
Just listen to what he wrote. | 0:16:34 | 0:16:36 | |
"This can be determined with almost the same certainty | 0:16:38 | 0:16:41 | |
"as a chemist determines under which external conditions | 0:16:41 | 0:16:45 | |
"given substances will form a compound." | 0:16:45 | 0:16:49 | |
A clinical deconstruction of the nature of society | 0:16:55 | 0:16:58 | |
was just the sort of thing the Prussian authorities feared. | 0:16:58 | 0:17:01 | |
Marx's provocations had ruffled the feathers | 0:17:01 | 0:17:04 | |
of those in power once too often. | 0:17:04 | 0:17:07 | |
His paper was shut down. | 0:17:07 | 0:17:09 | |
So we should picture Marx, aged just 25, | 0:17:12 | 0:17:16 | |
angry, ambitious, criticised. | 0:17:16 | 0:17:19 | |
'Censured in Prussia, | 0:17:20 | 0:17:22 | |
'he resolved to travel to the fulcrum of game-changing, provocative ideas.' | 0:17:22 | 0:17:27 | |
'The origin of those protest songs that his father once sang.' | 0:17:29 | 0:17:34 | |
The rallying point of revolution. | 0:17:34 | 0:17:37 | |
Marx's intellectual horizons expanded exponentially here. | 0:17:46 | 0:17:51 | |
The rebellious fervour of the French Revolution had never really evaporated | 0:17:51 | 0:17:56 | |
and the streets and bars were home to radical thinkers | 0:17:56 | 0:18:00 | |
whose ideas threatened to turn society upside down. | 0:18:00 | 0:18:05 | |
There were libertarian anarchists who declared | 0:18:07 | 0:18:09 | |
that all property was theft, | 0:18:09 | 0:18:11 | |
utopian socialists who sought common ownership of the means | 0:18:11 | 0:18:15 | |
of production, and communists who advocated | 0:18:15 | 0:18:19 | |
the creation of workers' co-operatives known as communes. | 0:18:19 | 0:18:23 | |
'In just over a year of frenetic discussion and writing, | 0:18:25 | 0:18:28 | |
'the shape of Marx's own agitating philosophy would | 0:18:28 | 0:18:31 | |
'start to form, and this was a new chapter in more ways than one. | 0:18:31 | 0:18:37 | |
He'd arrived with his childhood sweetheart and now wife, | 0:18:40 | 0:18:44 | |
Jenny von Westphalen. | 0:18:44 | 0:18:46 | |
The two had enjoyed the trappings of a well-to-do lifestyle back in Trier. | 0:18:46 | 0:18:50 | |
She was the daughter of a baron and her father had introduced Marx | 0:18:50 | 0:18:54 | |
to liberal thinkers and writers like Shakespeare. | 0:18:54 | 0:18:58 | |
But here in Paris they had to turn their back | 0:18:58 | 0:19:01 | |
on creature comforts and salon society. | 0:19:01 | 0:19:04 | |
The newlyweds lodged here on Rue Vaneau with friends. | 0:19:08 | 0:19:12 | |
'And it was from here that Marx continued to agitate for change in Prussia.' | 0:19:12 | 0:19:17 | |
Marx helped launched an ambitious publication that encouraged | 0:19:21 | 0:19:24 | |
collaboration between French and Prussian radicals. | 0:19:24 | 0:19:28 | |
Actually, there was only ever one edition | 0:19:28 | 0:19:31 | |
because of the difficulty partly of smuggling it into Prussia. | 0:19:31 | 0:19:34 | |
But the early essays that Marx wrote for this failed publication | 0:19:34 | 0:19:39 | |
are both historic gold and pivotal in the evolution of his ideas. | 0:19:39 | 0:19:44 | |
In these essays, we can start to piece together Marx's quest | 0:19:48 | 0:19:51 | |
to identify exactly what it is that limits humanity's freedom. | 0:19:51 | 0:19:57 | |
He's starting to take a different course from the Young Hegelians. | 0:19:58 | 0:20:02 | |
Rather than seeing religion as the root cause of our problems, | 0:20:03 | 0:20:07 | |
he describes it simply as "the opium of the people". | 0:20:07 | 0:20:12 | |
Just a painkiller for something much more deep-seated. | 0:20:12 | 0:20:15 | |
'The true source of our woes, as he saw it, was the way that | 0:20:23 | 0:20:28 | |
'society was organised to supply our material needs.' | 0:20:28 | 0:20:31 | |
The capitalist economy. | 0:20:33 | 0:20:35 | |
There have been decades of discussion of religion in Germany. | 0:20:36 | 0:20:40 | |
Marx thinks that is relatively superficial, | 0:20:40 | 0:20:44 | |
understanding that really the world we live in is the world of work, | 0:20:44 | 0:20:48 | |
the world of productivity and it's this that affects us | 0:20:48 | 0:20:50 | |
and the way that our lives go. | 0:20:50 | 0:20:52 | |
There's a phrase that he uses which is our species-essence, and I've never quite understood it. | 0:20:52 | 0:20:57 | |
Can you explain that to me? | 0:20:57 | 0:20:59 | |
The species-essence for Marx primarily | 0:20:59 | 0:21:02 | |
is about the way in which we human beings differ from other animals. | 0:21:02 | 0:21:05 | |
And the key idea for Marx is that human beings are | 0:21:05 | 0:21:10 | |
essentially productive beings. | 0:21:10 | 0:21:12 | |
Other animals - bees, beavers - do produce, but not like us. | 0:21:13 | 0:21:19 | |
Bees can only produce one thing, beavers produce one thing. | 0:21:19 | 0:21:22 | |
We can produce anything. | 0:21:22 | 0:21:25 | |
Marx thinks that all human beings are creative in the way | 0:21:25 | 0:21:28 | |
we produce but the tragedy of capitalism | 0:21:28 | 0:21:31 | |
is workers in a factory, they're simply engaging in repetitive tasks. | 0:21:31 | 0:21:36 | |
They're not doing the things human beings ought to be doing. | 0:21:36 | 0:21:40 | |
Now, Marx uses this notion of alienation from our species-essence | 0:21:41 | 0:21:44 | |
to explain not only the way that the individual worker | 0:21:44 | 0:21:48 | |
is sort of crushed and chained to the production line | 0:21:48 | 0:21:52 | |
but also the way in which we human beings are together | 0:21:52 | 0:21:54 | |
collectively dominated by the world. | 0:21:54 | 0:21:57 | |
Even the capitalist, actually, is dominated. | 0:21:57 | 0:21:59 | |
If a capitalist wanted to cut the working day, that probably | 0:21:59 | 0:22:03 | |
wouldn't be possible because competitors would exploit workers | 0:22:03 | 0:22:07 | |
just as much as before, they would lose profit and go out of business. | 0:22:07 | 0:22:11 | |
So, in this way, Marx said under capitalism | 0:22:11 | 0:22:14 | |
we become playthings of alien forces. | 0:22:14 | 0:22:16 | |
It's almost like a monster that we've created. | 0:22:20 | 0:22:24 | |
It's not something we control. | 0:22:24 | 0:22:26 | |
Now that Marx saw the world in a different way, | 0:22:31 | 0:22:34 | |
he set out to expose its workings. | 0:22:34 | 0:22:37 | |
With his ferocious intellect | 0:22:37 | 0:22:39 | |
and arguably too the bold conviction of youth, | 0:22:39 | 0:22:43 | |
he resolved to end degrading injustice | 0:22:43 | 0:22:46 | |
and to reunite people with their true innate being. | 0:22:46 | 0:22:50 | |
But Marx's philosophical mission would be beset by personal battles. | 0:22:57 | 0:23:02 | |
Marx suffered bad health, in particular a painful skin condition. | 0:23:05 | 0:23:09 | |
New research suggests that what he referred to as "boils" | 0:23:10 | 0:23:15 | |
was in fact something far more serious. | 0:23:15 | 0:23:18 | |
When I read an account of his life, it was quite an interesting book, | 0:23:18 | 0:23:22 | |
but it said he suffered really quite badly from a skin complaint. | 0:23:22 | 0:23:27 | |
Naturally I pricked up my ears and they said that he couldn't | 0:23:27 | 0:23:30 | |
find a place to rest, he couldn't lie down, he couldn't walk. | 0:23:30 | 0:23:35 | |
For three weeks at one point he was totally unable to work, | 0:23:35 | 0:23:40 | |
totally unable to think. | 0:23:40 | 0:23:42 | |
I thought, the skin complaint they said he was suffering from | 0:23:42 | 0:23:46 | |
was just boils. | 0:23:46 | 0:23:47 | |
Well, boils are a bit of a nuisance but they're not that bad. | 0:23:47 | 0:23:50 | |
And I looked at Marx's letters over a period of about nine years. | 0:23:50 | 0:23:56 | |
Bit tedious. | 0:23:56 | 0:23:58 | |
But you could see from these letters he gets them in the groin, | 0:23:58 | 0:24:02 | |
he gets them around the anus. | 0:24:02 | 0:24:04 | |
And then, very diagnostically, under the arms. | 0:24:04 | 0:24:09 | |
Now, this distribution only occurs in one disease. | 0:24:09 | 0:24:13 | |
-It's a thing called hidradenitis suppurativa. -Right. | 0:24:13 | 0:24:18 | |
A rather terrible, unpronounceable name. | 0:24:18 | 0:24:20 | |
-It sounds as though it's very debilitating physically. -Absolutely. | 0:24:20 | 0:24:25 | |
Here's, for example, an armpit. | 0:24:25 | 0:24:28 | |
It's scarred where there's been repeated episodes. | 0:24:28 | 0:24:32 | |
It never really stands still. | 0:24:32 | 0:24:35 | |
Do we know when he developed this? | 0:24:35 | 0:24:37 | |
The first traces I found in the letters was in his early 40s. | 0:24:37 | 0:24:43 | |
We know it starts in the early 20s, the average age is about 21 or 22. | 0:24:43 | 0:24:48 | |
So do we think this affected him psychologically? | 0:24:48 | 0:24:51 | |
When the skin is involved, our self-image changes. | 0:24:51 | 0:24:56 | |
It produces a self-loathing. | 0:24:56 | 0:24:59 | |
And Marx had this by the gallon. | 0:24:59 | 0:25:04 | |
In a letter here, he writes, | 0:25:04 | 0:25:08 | |
-"I took a sharp razor and lanced the cur myself." -Yeah. | 0:25:08 | 0:25:15 | |
How can you do that? | 0:25:15 | 0:25:18 | |
He regarded his disease as foreign to him. | 0:25:18 | 0:25:21 | |
Some have suggested that this condition | 0:25:24 | 0:25:27 | |
would've added to Marx's sense of alienation. | 0:25:27 | 0:25:30 | |
The new evidence certainly reminds us | 0:25:30 | 0:25:33 | |
that towering thinkers also live a flesh-and-blood existence. | 0:25:33 | 0:25:38 | |
In 1844, Marx became a father for the first time. | 0:25:46 | 0:25:49 | |
Jenny took their newborn daughter to see her family in Trier | 0:25:49 | 0:25:53 | |
and she was obviously genuinely worried | 0:25:53 | 0:25:56 | |
about leaving her husband alone | 0:25:56 | 0:25:58 | |
in a place renowned for its sexual licence. | 0:25:58 | 0:26:01 | |
She wrote anxiously of the real menace of unfaithfulness. | 0:26:01 | 0:26:07 | |
The seductions and attractions of a capital city. | 0:26:07 | 0:26:11 | |
Marx did arrange a rendezvous, but this was purely a meeting of minds. | 0:26:18 | 0:26:23 | |
An appointment with a radical writer who'd contributed | 0:26:23 | 0:26:25 | |
to Marx's failed journal - Friedrich Engels. | 0:26:25 | 0:26:29 | |
Engels was also from a bourgeois Prussian family. | 0:26:33 | 0:26:36 | |
Just two years younger than Marx, tall and handsome. | 0:26:36 | 0:26:40 | |
Both of them had mixed with a young Hegelian crowd | 0:26:40 | 0:26:43 | |
and had come to similar views on capitalism. | 0:26:43 | 0:26:46 | |
It seems that the friendship was lubricated by | 0:26:48 | 0:26:51 | |
an enthusiastic consumption of red wine. | 0:26:51 | 0:26:53 | |
The two were inseparable for 10 days. | 0:26:53 | 0:26:56 | |
Talking late into the night and railing against social, | 0:26:56 | 0:27:00 | |
political, economic injustice. | 0:27:00 | 0:27:03 | |
What Engels called the sheer misery | 0:27:03 | 0:27:06 | |
and material squalor of industrial life. | 0:27:06 | 0:27:09 | |
Engels readily conceded that Marx was by far the cleverer of the two. | 0:27:14 | 0:27:18 | |
But he had something that Marx lacked. | 0:27:18 | 0:27:22 | |
Engels had been leading a kind of double life. | 0:27:22 | 0:27:25 | |
Over the last two years, his day job had been | 0:27:29 | 0:27:31 | |
working for his father's textile business in industrial Manchester. | 0:27:31 | 0:27:35 | |
So he had first-hand experience of the engine room of capitalism. | 0:27:35 | 0:27:40 | |
Engels' lover was an Irish immigrant factory worker called Mary Burns. | 0:27:43 | 0:27:48 | |
She'd shown him the slum districts of Manchester | 0:27:48 | 0:27:51 | |
and so he'd witnessed the poverty of the urban classes | 0:27:51 | 0:27:54 | |
in ways that thesis-bound Marx never had. | 0:27:54 | 0:27:57 | |
As collaborators and friends, their joint mission | 0:28:00 | 0:28:03 | |
was to open people's eyes | 0:28:03 | 0:28:05 | |
to what they judged to be the devastating realities of capitalism. | 0:28:05 | 0:28:09 | |
SIRENS WAIL | 0:28:12 | 0:28:14 | |
But Paris turned out not to be a safe haven. | 0:28:16 | 0:28:20 | |
All Marx's fevered writing and those boozy conversations | 0:28:22 | 0:28:25 | |
with other agitators had attracted attention. | 0:28:25 | 0:28:29 | |
There were Prussian spies in Paris | 0:28:29 | 0:28:31 | |
and they alerted the French authorities | 0:28:31 | 0:28:33 | |
to the potential danger that Marx's ideas posed. | 0:28:33 | 0:28:37 | |
He was ordered out of the country. | 0:28:38 | 0:28:40 | |
In January 1845, Marx fled Paris in haste by postal coach... | 0:28:48 | 0:28:54 | |
..leaving Jenny behind with their baby daughter | 0:28:55 | 0:28:58 | |
to frantically pack up all their belongings. | 0:28:58 | 0:29:01 | |
Neighbouring Brussels accepted political refugees | 0:29:02 | 0:29:05 | |
and Marx applied for asylum. | 0:29:05 | 0:29:07 | |
He was granted temporary residence, | 0:29:07 | 0:29:09 | |
but on the strict understanding that he sign a written pledge | 0:29:09 | 0:29:13 | |
assuring that he wouldn't stir up dissent with his writing. | 0:29:13 | 0:29:16 | |
In Brussels, Marx still feared | 0:29:20 | 0:29:21 | |
the long arm of the Prussian authorities. | 0:29:21 | 0:29:24 | |
And so to avoid potential extradition, | 0:29:24 | 0:29:26 | |
he renounced his Prussian citizenship. | 0:29:26 | 0:29:29 | |
Marx had been marginalised. | 0:29:31 | 0:29:33 | |
He was stateless and virtually penniless, | 0:29:33 | 0:29:36 | |
but he clearly had no intention of taking all this lying down. | 0:29:36 | 0:29:41 | |
Despite the stringent conditions of his residency, | 0:29:41 | 0:29:44 | |
he was about to ramp up his political activity. | 0:29:44 | 0:29:47 | |
Marx reunited with Engels and, together, | 0:29:52 | 0:29:55 | |
they became part of the clandestine world of the communists. | 0:29:55 | 0:29:59 | |
Outraged at being exploited by the ruling classes, | 0:30:01 | 0:30:04 | |
they'd set up secret groups right across Europe. | 0:30:04 | 0:30:07 | |
These working-class activists wanted to abolish private property | 0:30:09 | 0:30:14 | |
and to create a revolutionary society. | 0:30:14 | 0:30:17 | |
We know that Marx and Engels hung out here with communists | 0:30:21 | 0:30:24 | |
in what was once a smoky bar and has now, rather ironically, | 0:30:24 | 0:30:28 | |
been transformed into an elegant bourgeois bistro. | 0:30:28 | 0:30:31 | |
The men that Marx met here, | 0:30:33 | 0:30:34 | |
he believed to be the very foot soldiers of revolutionary change. | 0:30:34 | 0:30:39 | |
Change which, and this is a critical shift, | 0:30:39 | 0:30:43 | |
Marx now actively sought to effect himself. | 0:30:43 | 0:30:46 | |
As he wrote, "Philosophers have only interpreted the world. | 0:30:46 | 0:30:51 | |
"The point is to change it." | 0:30:51 | 0:30:54 | |
He and Engels matched their words with deeds and began to coordinate | 0:30:56 | 0:31:01 | |
a network of communists across Europe from their base in Brussels. | 0:31:01 | 0:31:05 | |
But they didn't stop theorising. | 0:31:06 | 0:31:08 | |
As ever, Marx was determined to solve big problems with big ideas | 0:31:10 | 0:31:16 | |
and with the power of the written word. | 0:31:16 | 0:31:19 | |
Marx and Engels are working furiously together here. | 0:31:21 | 0:31:24 | |
What's the quantum shift in their thinking? | 0:31:24 | 0:31:27 | |
The quantum shift is they now see that it's economic organisations | 0:31:27 | 0:31:32 | |
and the way they change throughout history, | 0:31:32 | 0:31:34 | |
THAT'S what drives history forward. | 0:31:34 | 0:31:37 | |
That's the motor. | 0:31:37 | 0:31:38 | |
And they see the way society organises itself economically | 0:31:38 | 0:31:43 | |
changing according to new technological developments. | 0:31:43 | 0:31:47 | |
And they trace movements from a very early, cooperative - | 0:31:47 | 0:31:52 | |
as they see it - a cooperative society | 0:31:52 | 0:31:55 | |
in which people live in a communal fashion | 0:31:55 | 0:31:58 | |
through slave-owning societies | 0:31:58 | 0:32:01 | |
on into medieval feudalism | 0:32:01 | 0:32:04 | |
with aristocratic landowners and their serfs, | 0:32:04 | 0:32:08 | |
and then the Industrial Revolution and the birth of capitalism. | 0:32:08 | 0:32:13 | |
-So, this is history as they see it. -Mm. -What's the issue here? | 0:32:14 | 0:32:18 | |
I mean, what's the problem with this? | 0:32:18 | 0:32:19 | |
Well, the problem is that for most of human history, | 0:32:19 | 0:32:22 | |
there have been haves and have-nots. | 0:32:22 | 0:32:24 | |
And that most humans have lost out | 0:32:24 | 0:32:27 | |
to the people who own the property and who own the means of production. | 0:32:27 | 0:32:32 | |
And he thinks the problem is getting even worse under capitalism. | 0:32:32 | 0:32:36 | |
So, economics is important, class is also very important to them | 0:32:36 | 0:32:41 | |
-both at this time, isn't it? -Hugely. | 0:32:41 | 0:32:43 | |
They see capitalism necessarily leading to antagonisms | 0:32:43 | 0:32:48 | |
between particularly the bourgeois capitalist | 0:32:48 | 0:32:52 | |
property-owning class and the proletariat who sell their labour - | 0:32:52 | 0:32:56 | |
because he says capitalism is intrinsically exploitative. | 0:32:56 | 0:33:00 | |
And more than this, he thinks that law, religion, politics, | 0:33:00 | 0:33:05 | |
culture, the arts generally, | 0:33:05 | 0:33:07 | |
they're all there to keep the ruling classes in power and in place. | 0:33:07 | 0:33:13 | |
They are a superstructure, an ideology to maintain the status quo. | 0:33:13 | 0:33:18 | |
And he thinks that part of his job is to strip the mask away | 0:33:18 | 0:33:24 | |
so people can see that they've been had. | 0:33:24 | 0:33:27 | |
Marx believed that capitalism | 0:33:32 | 0:33:34 | |
contained the seeds of its own destruction. | 0:33:34 | 0:33:36 | |
All that he had to do was to awaken what he called the proletariat - | 0:33:36 | 0:33:42 | |
the working classes of industrial society - | 0:33:42 | 0:33:44 | |
to their revolutionary role, to bring about communism, | 0:33:44 | 0:33:49 | |
the final stage of history, when all class divisions would be eradicated. | 0:33:49 | 0:33:54 | |
By 1847, events in Europe were on his side. | 0:33:56 | 0:33:59 | |
A revolutionary storm had been brewing. | 0:34:01 | 0:34:03 | |
The failure of wheat and potato crops across Europe | 0:34:03 | 0:34:07 | |
brought famine, food riots and political unrest. | 0:34:07 | 0:34:11 | |
So when Marx and Engels were commissioned to write | 0:34:11 | 0:34:14 | |
a Profession of Faith by the Communist League, | 0:34:14 | 0:34:17 | |
they had everything to play for, and they didn't hold back. | 0:34:17 | 0:34:21 | |
UPBEAT INSTRUMENTAL | 0:34:21 | 0:34:23 | |
In January 1848, | 0:34:26 | 0:34:28 | |
Marx and Engels hurried to meet their tight deadline. | 0:34:28 | 0:34:31 | |
Written with immense fluency in just over two weeks | 0:34:34 | 0:34:37 | |
in a fug of cheap cigar smoke, | 0:34:37 | 0:34:40 | |
they produced this little book. | 0:34:40 | 0:34:43 | |
This is the Communist Manifesto. | 0:34:43 | 0:34:46 | |
It's just 30 pages long, | 0:34:46 | 0:34:48 | |
but in those pages is some of the most infamous | 0:34:48 | 0:34:52 | |
and influential political propaganda of all-time. | 0:34:52 | 0:34:56 | |
A lot of people think this is just going to be a kind of hatchet job on capitalism, | 0:35:01 | 0:35:04 | |
but he's actually full of praise for the bourgeoisie. | 0:35:04 | 0:35:07 | |
And he says that, "it has accomplished wonders far surpassing | 0:35:07 | 0:35:10 | |
"Egyptian pyramids, Roman aqueducts and Gothic cathedrals". | 0:35:10 | 0:35:14 | |
That sounds like a great celebration of the bourgeoisie | 0:35:14 | 0:35:17 | |
-and of capitalism, in a way. -It is. | 0:35:17 | 0:35:19 | |
He's actually saying that without the advances | 0:35:19 | 0:35:24 | |
and the things that capitalism can bring, | 0:35:24 | 0:35:27 | |
communist society cannot work. | 0:35:27 | 0:35:30 | |
Because communist society needs an abundance of goods | 0:35:30 | 0:35:33 | |
that everybody can take advantage of. | 0:35:33 | 0:35:36 | |
And he actually says at one point just before that quote, | 0:35:36 | 0:35:38 | |
he says, "the bourgeoisie has got a revolutionary role in history". | 0:35:38 | 0:35:42 | |
And he's really gingering up the language. | 0:35:42 | 0:35:44 | |
Because some of those phrases, "the spectre of communism is haunting Europe" | 0:35:44 | 0:35:48 | |
and, "all that's solid melts into air" - | 0:35:48 | 0:35:50 | |
-they're incredibly memorable, aren't they? -Yeah. | 0:35:50 | 0:35:52 | |
"The bourgeoisie creates its own grave-diggers." | 0:35:52 | 0:35:55 | |
You know, he's a master of prose, really. | 0:35:55 | 0:35:57 | |
He knew exactly what he was doing. | 0:35:57 | 0:35:59 | |
And one thing that troubles me is when ideas become ideologies. | 0:35:59 | 0:36:02 | |
And that feels like that's what's happening here. | 0:36:02 | 0:36:05 | |
There's a kind of calcification of ideas, | 0:36:05 | 0:36:08 | |
-so it become quite a dangerous document. -Yeah. | 0:36:08 | 0:36:10 | |
Just as he said that the bourgeoisie was like a sorcerer | 0:36:10 | 0:36:14 | |
that's created something that he can't actually control any more, | 0:36:14 | 0:36:18 | |
perhaps he's doing that. | 0:36:18 | 0:36:19 | |
He's creating something that he...that he can't control any more, | 0:36:19 | 0:36:23 | |
especially when he's gone. | 0:36:23 | 0:36:25 | |
Despite the radical fervour | 0:36:28 | 0:36:29 | |
and sheer rhetorical power of the manifesto, it went almost unnoticed. | 0:36:29 | 0:36:34 | |
The ink was still wet on the first German edition | 0:36:38 | 0:36:40 | |
when revolts erupted across Europe. | 0:36:40 | 0:36:43 | |
Here in Paris, workers barricaded the streets. | 0:36:44 | 0:36:48 | |
After three days of frenzied fighting, | 0:36:48 | 0:36:50 | |
they overthrew the monarchy and proclaimed a republic. | 0:36:50 | 0:36:53 | |
You can just imagine the atmosphere of expectation. | 0:36:56 | 0:37:00 | |
Something equivalent perhaps to the experience of the Arab Spring. | 0:37:00 | 0:37:03 | |
The world changing in front of your eyes. | 0:37:03 | 0:37:06 | |
People power overturning the status quo. | 0:37:06 | 0:37:09 | |
A domino line of radicalism. | 0:37:09 | 0:37:12 | |
The Belgian authorities, fearing an uprising, | 0:37:16 | 0:37:19 | |
gave Marx just 24 hours to clear out. | 0:37:19 | 0:37:22 | |
He needed a little encouragement to leave | 0:37:24 | 0:37:26 | |
and to take up a lead role with the revolutionaries. | 0:37:26 | 0:37:30 | |
But the insurrections quickly collapsed in chaos. | 0:37:32 | 0:37:35 | |
In France, an attempt by the new Republican government | 0:37:35 | 0:37:38 | |
to quell a workers' protest spiralled out of control. | 0:37:38 | 0:37:42 | |
Over 10,000 died or were injured. | 0:37:43 | 0:37:46 | |
And across Europe, the old ruling classes | 0:37:46 | 0:37:50 | |
quickly re-established control. | 0:37:50 | 0:37:52 | |
Marx ended up in Prussia, hoping to ferment revolution. | 0:37:55 | 0:37:59 | |
But he was arrested, put on trial for inciting rebellion | 0:37:59 | 0:38:02 | |
and narrowly escaped prison. | 0:38:02 | 0:38:05 | |
There was just one haven left. | 0:38:07 | 0:38:09 | |
A relatively stable kingdom that was still prepared | 0:38:09 | 0:38:12 | |
to take on refugees with radical views. | 0:38:12 | 0:38:15 | |
In August 1849, | 0:38:15 | 0:38:18 | |
Marx set sail for England. | 0:38:18 | 0:38:20 | |
Arriving here aged 32, | 0:38:33 | 0:38:35 | |
Marx consoled himself that the uprisings of 1848 had failed | 0:38:35 | 0:38:40 | |
because the historical conditions weren't yet right for change. | 0:38:40 | 0:38:44 | |
The ultimate revolution that his philosophical theories | 0:38:44 | 0:38:48 | |
predicted was yet to come. | 0:38:48 | 0:38:50 | |
But life in London would offer little else in the way of solace. | 0:38:50 | 0:38:55 | |
With over two million inhabitants, this challenging, unforgiving, | 0:38:56 | 0:39:00 | |
dystopian metropolis was the biggest city in the world. | 0:39:00 | 0:39:04 | |
Even back then, the cost of living in London was crushingly expensive. | 0:39:06 | 0:39:11 | |
Marx, Jenny and his four children | 0:39:13 | 0:39:15 | |
could only afford to live in what were then the slums of Soho, | 0:39:15 | 0:39:20 | |
alongside other immigrants in cramped, debasing conditions. | 0:39:20 | 0:39:24 | |
Jenny actually wrote that it cost more to rent one room here | 0:39:24 | 0:39:29 | |
for a week than the biggest house in Germany for a month. | 0:39:29 | 0:39:33 | |
In London, Marx set out to write a definitive account | 0:39:35 | 0:39:39 | |
of the driving forces of capitalism. | 0:39:39 | 0:39:41 | |
But his plans were complicated by the turmoil of his personal life, | 0:39:42 | 0:39:46 | |
which was still subject to Prussian surveillance. | 0:39:46 | 0:39:49 | |
A spy who'd managed to gain access to Marx's home | 0:39:52 | 0:39:55 | |
described the household as squalid and chaotic. | 0:39:55 | 0:39:59 | |
"Washing, grooming, and changing his linen are things he does rarely | 0:40:00 | 0:40:05 | |
"and he often gets drunk. | 0:40:05 | 0:40:07 | |
"Though often idle for days on end, he will work day and night | 0:40:07 | 0:40:10 | |
"with tireless endurance. | 0:40:10 | 0:40:12 | |
"He has no fixed time for going to sleep and waking and he often | 0:40:12 | 0:40:17 | |
"stays up all night | 0:40:17 | 0:40:18 | |
"and then lies fully clothed on the sofa at midday." | 0:40:18 | 0:40:22 | |
Marx's all-consuming theorising and political agitating | 0:40:28 | 0:40:32 | |
dragged his family down. | 0:40:32 | 0:40:34 | |
Unemployed and destitute, they pawned everything | 0:40:35 | 0:40:38 | |
and ran up tabs with local businesses | 0:40:38 | 0:40:41 | |
while Jenny went to beg her parents for a hand-out. | 0:40:41 | 0:40:44 | |
And then we're told Marx made things worse. | 0:40:45 | 0:40:48 | |
Living with the family was a feisty woman called Helene - | 0:40:50 | 0:40:54 | |
she helped around the house, | 0:40:54 | 0:40:55 | |
she was a fellow radical and a friend. | 0:40:55 | 0:40:58 | |
But Marx slept with her and fathered an illegitimate son | 0:40:58 | 0:41:03 | |
at the same time that Jenny was pregnant again. | 0:41:03 | 0:41:05 | |
This was not Marx's finest hour. | 0:41:07 | 0:41:09 | |
Jenny was furious. | 0:41:12 | 0:41:14 | |
They'd all known each other | 0:41:14 | 0:41:16 | |
for a long time, so clearly, | 0:41:16 | 0:41:17 | |
there is some drama and upset that goes on. | 0:41:17 | 0:41:20 | |
And it is really, really heavy going. | 0:41:20 | 0:41:22 | |
Marx is sending notes to Engels, saying, | 0:41:22 | 0:41:24 | |
"I can't go home, because it's an absolute storm | 0:41:24 | 0:41:26 | |
"and everybody is really upset and Jenny is furious. | 0:41:26 | 0:41:29 | |
"Please come and have a drink with me in the pub on Great Russell Street." | 0:41:29 | 0:41:32 | |
You know, he has slept with somebody who is not his wife. She's pregnant. | 0:41:32 | 0:41:36 | |
This is a terrible stigma at the time. It's tough now, | 0:41:36 | 0:41:38 | |
it was really, really tough in the middle of the 19th century. | 0:41:38 | 0:41:42 | |
Well, is it? | 0:41:42 | 0:41:44 | |
Because they are quite conventionally unconventional | 0:41:44 | 0:41:46 | |
and at that time, illegitimacy - | 0:41:46 | 0:41:48 | |
particularly in the circles | 0:41:48 | 0:41:50 | |
that they were moving in politically and socially - | 0:41:50 | 0:41:53 | |
isn't such a stigma, but at the same time, quite a lot of the evidence | 0:41:53 | 0:41:57 | |
points towards the fact that Jenny wanted it covered up. | 0:41:57 | 0:42:00 | |
So who takes responsibility for all this? | 0:42:00 | 0:42:03 | |
Who makes it OK is Engels. | 0:42:03 | 0:42:05 | |
He even lets it be understood that he is the father. | 0:42:05 | 0:42:09 | |
And Engels take the rap for his best friend. | 0:42:09 | 0:42:13 | |
What do you think this incident tells us about Marx? | 0:42:13 | 0:42:16 | |
Marx is a man! | 0:42:16 | 0:42:17 | |
And ultimately, also a Victorian patriarch - | 0:42:18 | 0:42:22 | |
a man like any other that needs to be understood in context. | 0:42:22 | 0:42:26 | |
And all heroes have their flaws. | 0:42:26 | 0:42:28 | |
Throughout his troubles, Marx was always propped up by Engels. | 0:42:31 | 0:42:35 | |
He compromised his revolutionary ambitions | 0:42:36 | 0:42:40 | |
and returned to his father's factory - | 0:42:40 | 0:42:42 | |
somewhat paradoxically, to bankroll Marx's theorising. | 0:42:42 | 0:42:47 | |
But despite this, Marx's family life was mired in tragedy. | 0:42:49 | 0:42:54 | |
Three of his children died in infancy. | 0:42:57 | 0:42:59 | |
The nadir was the death of Marx's eight-year-old son, Edgar, | 0:43:01 | 0:43:05 | |
the apple of his eye, | 0:43:05 | 0:43:07 | |
who died in his father's arms on Good Friday, 1855. | 0:43:07 | 0:43:11 | |
When Edgar's body was lowered into his grave, other mourners | 0:43:15 | 0:43:19 | |
thought that Marx was so distraught, | 0:43:19 | 0:43:21 | |
he was actually on the brink of throwing himself in. | 0:43:21 | 0:43:24 | |
But after the heartbreak came a modest reprieve. | 0:43:42 | 0:43:45 | |
Jenny received two inheritances, allowing them to move to the | 0:43:45 | 0:43:49 | |
relative prosperity of the suburbs. | 0:43:49 | 0:43:52 | |
Yet even here, Marx was still plagued by debt - | 0:43:53 | 0:43:57 | |
much of it self-inflicted, as he lavished money | 0:43:57 | 0:44:00 | |
trying to maintain a respectable middle-class lifestyle | 0:44:00 | 0:44:04 | |
with private education and dancing lessons for his girls. | 0:44:04 | 0:44:08 | |
You do wonder just how much he was trying to replicate the bourgeois, | 0:44:08 | 0:44:12 | |
comfortable world that he'd been born into. | 0:44:12 | 0:44:15 | |
By the time Marx turned 40, he was a regular at the new Reading Room | 0:44:20 | 0:44:25 | |
of the British Museum. | 0:44:25 | 0:44:26 | |
Here, he spent 12 hours a day gathering evidence for his | 0:44:26 | 0:44:30 | |
definitive critique of capitalism, Das Kapital. | 0:44:30 | 0:44:35 | |
By the 1860s, Britain was the world's industrial powerhouse. | 0:44:40 | 0:44:44 | |
The UK population had doubled since the turn of the century, | 0:44:45 | 0:44:50 | |
with terrible social impact. | 0:44:50 | 0:44:51 | |
Sifting through public records, Marx would find what he was looking for - | 0:44:53 | 0:44:58 | |
traces of the destructive consequences of rampant capitalism. | 0:44:58 | 0:45:02 | |
This is a Children's Commission report, 1863, so exactly | 0:45:04 | 0:45:08 | |
at the right time for Marx to be writing Kapital. | 0:45:08 | 0:45:11 | |
And there's a nine-year-old kid, working a 15-hour day. | 0:45:11 | 0:45:15 | |
Marx looks at that and he understands that in that story | 0:45:15 | 0:45:20 | |
lies the whole secret of how this system works. | 0:45:20 | 0:45:24 | |
The secret of capitalism is this idea of surplus value. | 0:45:24 | 0:45:28 | |
Where does profit come from? | 0:45:28 | 0:45:30 | |
Marx says it comes from work. | 0:45:30 | 0:45:32 | |
When this little boy turns up to work, everything that's gone | 0:45:32 | 0:45:36 | |
into getting him there - the food, the clothing, maybe the | 0:45:36 | 0:45:39 | |
education, certainly the housing - cost some money and his | 0:45:39 | 0:45:44 | |
labour is worth all of that. | 0:45:44 | 0:45:47 | |
But the amount of work he does during that working day, that | 0:45:47 | 0:45:51 | |
15-hour working day, is way above what he needs to and the | 0:45:51 | 0:45:55 | |
difference between what it should take, what his work is really worth, | 0:45:55 | 0:45:59 | |
and what he's actually working, is a surplus. | 0:45:59 | 0:46:03 | |
That's where profit comes from and we know, actually, that | 0:46:03 | 0:46:06 | |
he is trawling through this stuff for these acute examples of | 0:46:06 | 0:46:12 | |
exploitation, because he wants to shove the concept of | 0:46:12 | 0:46:15 | |
exploitation right down the throats of mainstream economics. | 0:46:15 | 0:46:20 | |
Mainstream economics - then and today - doesn't even accept that | 0:46:20 | 0:46:24 | |
exploitation exists. | 0:46:24 | 0:46:26 | |
When a factory falls on the head | 0:46:26 | 0:46:27 | |
of a bunch of Bangladeshi garment workers, that's an accident. | 0:46:27 | 0:46:30 | |
To Marx, it's one of the most fundamental laws of capitalism, | 0:46:30 | 0:46:35 | |
that the capitalist will extract the maximum amount of | 0:46:35 | 0:46:40 | |
surplus value that they can. | 0:46:40 | 0:46:43 | |
Where's this system heading? | 0:46:43 | 0:46:45 | |
What does he think the future of capitalism is? | 0:46:45 | 0:46:47 | |
Marx isn't predicting the imminent doom of capitalism. | 0:46:47 | 0:46:50 | |
He understands that it is a fully functioning system. | 0:46:50 | 0:46:54 | |
But he identifies the fragility that in this system based on profit, | 0:46:54 | 0:46:58 | |
where all the profit is extracted from the work of people, | 0:46:58 | 0:47:03 | |
then you hit limits. | 0:47:03 | 0:47:05 | |
The first limit you hit is the working day, | 0:47:05 | 0:47:07 | |
because you can't extend the working day forever. | 0:47:07 | 0:47:10 | |
You must innovate. | 0:47:10 | 0:47:11 | |
You must create machines and the machines squeeze the worker | 0:47:11 | 0:47:16 | |
more and more out of the production process, then the very source | 0:47:16 | 0:47:20 | |
of all the profit is squeezed into a tiny area, | 0:47:20 | 0:47:24 | |
so you get repeated crises of profitability. | 0:47:24 | 0:47:27 | |
People in Marx's time were asking whose fault was it that X, Y, Z company went bust? | 0:47:27 | 0:47:33 | |
Marx says it's not anybody's fault. | 0:47:33 | 0:47:35 | |
It's the fault of the profit system, which is based on the exploitation | 0:47:35 | 0:47:38 | |
of workers and the exploitation of workers cannot go on producing the | 0:47:38 | 0:47:44 | |
profit at the rate it is required to expand the system forever. | 0:47:44 | 0:47:48 | |
Marx believed there were too many contradictions | 0:47:52 | 0:47:55 | |
within the capitalist system for it to survive. | 0:47:55 | 0:47:57 | |
The cycle of boom and bust and expansion and recession | 0:47:57 | 0:48:01 | |
meant that it was inherently unstable. | 0:48:01 | 0:48:04 | |
After 16 years, Das Kapital Volume I was finally finished in 1867. | 0:48:10 | 0:48:17 | |
But it didn't have the impact that Marx had hoped for. | 0:48:18 | 0:48:21 | |
Engels actually ghost-wrote some reviews, | 0:48:24 | 0:48:27 | |
to try to drum up interest on the Continent. | 0:48:27 | 0:48:29 | |
Now Marx suspected that the indifferent response | 0:48:30 | 0:48:33 | |
was a conspiracy of silence orchestrated by his enemies, | 0:48:33 | 0:48:38 | |
but I think it's probably much more straightforward than that. | 0:48:38 | 0:48:42 | |
Kapital is really long and although some of the writing is very vivid, | 0:48:42 | 0:48:46 | |
much of it is dense and demanding | 0:48:46 | 0:48:49 | |
and reading this cover-to-cover is a serious commitment. | 0:48:49 | 0:48:53 | |
Also, Europe was experiencing economic growth, | 0:49:00 | 0:49:04 | |
thanks largely to expanding global markets. | 0:49:04 | 0:49:06 | |
While the British government was passing laws to improve working | 0:49:07 | 0:49:10 | |
conditions, the crisis of capitalism - the touchpaper of revolution - | 0:49:10 | 0:49:17 | |
showed no sign of arriving. | 0:49:17 | 0:49:19 | |
This seems to me to be one of the great ironies of Marx's life. | 0:49:23 | 0:49:26 | |
Marx had identified the need for change but then things did change | 0:49:27 | 0:49:32 | |
at such an exponentially rapid rate that by the time | 0:49:32 | 0:49:36 | |
he'd worked out a coherent solution to society's problems, | 0:49:36 | 0:49:40 | |
the world had already moved on - | 0:49:40 | 0:49:43 | |
leaving him behind. | 0:49:43 | 0:49:45 | |
With the help of a generous pension from Engels, Marx gradually | 0:49:49 | 0:49:53 | |
settled into comfortable, middle-class respectability. | 0:49:53 | 0:49:56 | |
He spent his time with his beloved grandchildren | 0:49:58 | 0:50:01 | |
and enjoyed family walks here on Hampstead Heath. | 0:50:01 | 0:50:04 | |
Marx even admits to speculation on the stock market, which of | 0:50:07 | 0:50:10 | |
course, you could argue is wildly hypocritical and at the very least | 0:50:10 | 0:50:15 | |
is probably a sign that he thought capitalism was here to stay. | 0:50:15 | 0:50:19 | |
In his 60s, he became crippled by worsening health | 0:50:21 | 0:50:24 | |
and heartbroken by the death of his wife Jenny. | 0:50:24 | 0:50:29 | |
Knowing he was nearing his end, he had this photograph taken as | 0:50:29 | 0:50:33 | |
a lasting memory for his daughters, | 0:50:33 | 0:50:36 | |
before symbolically shaving off his trademark beard and hair. | 0:50:36 | 0:50:40 | |
When Marx finally died in March 1883, a photograph of his father, | 0:50:46 | 0:50:52 | |
who had strived to give his son a good start in life, was found in the | 0:50:52 | 0:50:56 | |
breast pocket of his jacket and it was buried together with | 0:50:56 | 0:51:00 | |
Marx in a simple grave here in a remote corner of Highgate Cemetery. | 0:51:00 | 0:51:05 | |
Engels paid for Marx's original burial plot. | 0:51:12 | 0:51:16 | |
Just 11 mourners attended the funeral. | 0:51:16 | 0:51:18 | |
Engels' words by Marx's graveside - | 0:51:20 | 0:51:23 | |
"His name and work will endure through the ages" - | 0:51:23 | 0:51:26 | |
must have seemed more optimistic than prophetic, | 0:51:26 | 0:51:30 | |
but as it turned out, | 0:51:30 | 0:51:32 | |
he was absolutely right. | 0:51:32 | 0:51:35 | |
Marx's ideas were codified and clarified by Engels, | 0:51:50 | 0:51:54 | |
promoting Marx as a great thinker. | 0:51:54 | 0:51:57 | |
Socialist movements across the world | 0:51:59 | 0:52:01 | |
started to translate Marx's persuasive works. | 0:52:01 | 0:52:04 | |
His ideas began to gain momentum. | 0:52:05 | 0:52:08 | |
Finally, in one country, a Communist revolution succeeded. | 0:52:09 | 0:52:14 | |
COMMENTARY: 'A human sea, joyous and wrathful, overflowed out of the city streets | 0:52:16 | 0:52:20 | |
'in mighty demonstrations. The revolutionary fire of the masses | 0:52:20 | 0:52:24 | |
'was finally unleashed.' | 0:52:24 | 0:52:26 | |
But it defied all Marxist logic, | 0:52:27 | 0:52:30 | |
because the conditions for change - | 0:52:30 | 0:52:33 | |
a highly developed capitalist economy - had barely emerged. | 0:52:33 | 0:52:36 | |
Russian communism had been kick-started | 0:52:37 | 0:52:40 | |
by the Bolshevik Revolution in Moscow in 1917 | 0:52:40 | 0:52:44 | |
and seven decades later, it became crashing down here | 0:52:44 | 0:52:47 | |
with the fall of the Berlin Wall. | 0:52:47 | 0:52:49 | |
Revolution wasn't just powered by the proletariat as Karl Marx | 0:52:51 | 0:52:55 | |
had predicted, but by a whole range of radicals and agitators. | 0:52:55 | 0:53:00 | |
Top-down revolutionaries, notably Stalin, claimed to be | 0:53:03 | 0:53:07 | |
disciples of Marx and his theories. | 0:53:07 | 0:53:10 | |
But their authoritarian ideologies | 0:53:11 | 0:53:14 | |
crushed the liberty that Marx cherished. | 0:53:14 | 0:53:17 | |
Paradoxically, he would have been condemned by their regimes. | 0:53:18 | 0:53:22 | |
Their distorted appropriation of Marx | 0:53:25 | 0:53:28 | |
is demonstrated by recent analysis of one famous text - | 0:53:28 | 0:53:32 | |
The German Ideology. | 0:53:32 | 0:53:33 | |
Well, we've got Engels' handwriting here and he had | 0:53:35 | 0:53:39 | |
quite good handwriting. | 0:53:39 | 0:53:41 | |
Marx's handwriting was absolutely terrible. | 0:53:41 | 0:53:44 | |
And so, we can tell from this page | 0:53:44 | 0:53:47 | |
that Marx is making insertions | 0:53:47 | 0:53:49 | |
into Engels' draft. | 0:53:49 | 0:53:52 | |
And what's it actually aiming to do? What are they working on here? | 0:53:52 | 0:53:55 | |
Well, from the draft by Engels, | 0:53:55 | 0:53:58 | |
we get this story about communist society - | 0:53:58 | 0:54:01 | |
will it allow people to do what they want? | 0:54:01 | 0:54:05 | |
Because they would not be constrained | 0:54:05 | 0:54:08 | |
by the economically imposed division of labour. | 0:54:08 | 0:54:12 | |
So, he's developing a vision | 0:54:12 | 0:54:16 | |
which includes livestock herding, | 0:54:16 | 0:54:19 | |
hunting and fishing, but I think he gets a very sharp message from Marx, | 0:54:19 | 0:54:24 | |
saying, "Let's get back on track here." | 0:54:24 | 0:54:26 | |
And he does it in a kind of indirect way. | 0:54:26 | 0:54:30 | |
He doesn't just write, "Well, you're wrong." | 0:54:30 | 0:54:32 | |
He writes something quite sarcastic, | 0:54:32 | 0:54:35 | |
so he inserts the words, "and criticise after dinner". | 0:54:35 | 0:54:39 | |
This work-in-progress draft was rejected by Marx and Engels. | 0:54:40 | 0:54:44 | |
But in the 1920s, it was resurrected, taken at face value | 0:54:44 | 0:54:49 | |
as a blueprint for communism and printed in smooth text, | 0:54:49 | 0:54:52 | |
obscuring its knock-about origins. | 0:54:52 | 0:54:57 | |
So this is very much a draft and yet, this will become the kind | 0:54:57 | 0:55:01 | |
of foundations for a big political ideology. | 0:55:01 | 0:55:05 | |
Yes, and a lot of people have an investment in making him simple | 0:55:05 | 0:55:09 | |
and making him dogmatic and you can get political mileage | 0:55:09 | 0:55:13 | |
out of that, but we don't have to do that. | 0:55:13 | 0:55:15 | |
He was a man with questions and went looking for answers. | 0:55:15 | 0:55:19 | |
He wasn't a man who had a big idea, | 0:55:19 | 0:55:21 | |
one answer, and then that's what he found everywhere. | 0:55:21 | 0:55:26 | |
He actually went on the record saying he didn't want to be | 0:55:26 | 0:55:29 | |
a kind of guru or prophet or great teacher. | 0:55:29 | 0:55:33 | |
So when we look at evidence like this, | 0:55:33 | 0:55:35 | |
should we remember Marx - should we think about him differently? | 0:55:35 | 0:55:39 | |
Yes, I hope so and I think we need to be prepared | 0:55:39 | 0:55:42 | |
for a much more exploratory, much less dogmatic Marx. | 0:55:42 | 0:55:45 | |
I think Marx's genius lies in his determination to think abstractly about capitalism - | 0:55:51 | 0:55:57 | |
to look beneath the surface reality, to ask about its destiny. | 0:55:57 | 0:56:01 | |
The idea that I find most compelling | 0:56:04 | 0:56:06 | |
is his idea about the alienation of labour. | 0:56:06 | 0:56:08 | |
If you're cut off from the fruits of your labour, | 0:56:10 | 0:56:13 | |
if you're cut off from your creativity, | 0:56:13 | 0:56:15 | |
then you lose your sense of self. | 0:56:15 | 0:56:17 | |
The challenge he leaves us with is - | 0:56:20 | 0:56:22 | |
can we live under a capitalist system and retain healthy, | 0:56:22 | 0:56:26 | |
functional, non-exploitative human relationships? | 0:56:26 | 0:56:31 | |
Marx stated that communism is the riddle of history solved. | 0:56:35 | 0:56:41 | |
I'd argue that that is demonstrably untrue. | 0:56:41 | 0:56:44 | |
His prediction that a communist utopia would emerge to | 0:56:44 | 0:56:48 | |
emancipate humanity is yet to be realised and as a historian, | 0:56:48 | 0:56:53 | |
I just can't accept that one single idea can solve the | 0:56:53 | 0:56:58 | |
complex riddle of the human experience. | 0:56:58 | 0:57:01 | |
There's a dreadful paradox that the man who said that he hated | 0:57:05 | 0:57:08 | |
ideology inspired one of the most rigid ideologies in history. | 0:57:08 | 0:57:13 | |
It seems to me that Marx's life-story trumpets a warning that | 0:57:14 | 0:57:19 | |
ideas can acquire their own inherent power and that charismatic, | 0:57:19 | 0:57:24 | |
explosive thoughts - particularly if set down on the page as writing - | 0:57:24 | 0:57:28 | |
can be twisted from their original intention | 0:57:28 | 0:57:32 | |
and manipulated for malign ends. | 0:57:32 | 0:57:35 | |
But Marx's desire to find the root cause of human distress, | 0:57:37 | 0:57:42 | |
of suffering and inequality, | 0:57:42 | 0:57:45 | |
is surely a laudable goal. | 0:57:45 | 0:57:47 | |
So whether you choose to read Marx as a hero or a villain, | 0:57:47 | 0:57:52 | |
his philosophical journey must be interrogated and never forgotten. | 0:57:52 | 0:57:58 | |
If the mind of Marx has made you think, then explore further | 0:58:09 | 0:58:12 | |
with the Open University to discover how other great minds have | 0:58:12 | 0:58:16 | |
influenced our world today. | 0:58:16 | 0:58:18 | |
Go to the address at the bottom of the screen | 0:58:18 | 0:58:21 | |
and follow the links to the Open University. | 0:58:21 | 0:58:23 |