Re Paul B's [6490]: > Overall you have unearthed nothing much to blink at, Then let's us again examine the letters in question. * Marx to Engels 2/25/59 > Marx refers to 'the little Jew Braun'...the expression is used to poke fun/(nickname) at Lassalle, and is used 3 times in the letter about his work and Marx's correspondence with him... nevertheless Lassalles work on Hereclitus.. .. is described as 'better than anything the democrats could boast of'.< My translation reads 'Jew-boy Braun'. 'Jew-boy Braun' was his name for Ferdinand Lassalle, who was very much a *man* rather than a boy. Saul Padover wrote that this was 'Marx's anti-Semitic tag for Lassalle'. I think this is supported by the fact that in all cases when placed in context this expression was used in a derogatory way by Marx. [An interesting sidebar on the Sieber thread is Marx's note in this letter that in _The Poverty of Philosophy_ he 'accepted Ricardo's theory' of money.] * Marx to Antoinette Philips 3/24/61 > refers to the 'nastily Jewish physiognomy' of ' the most ugly creature I ever saw in my life'.. Fraulein Ludmilla Assing in a description of an evening meal at Lasalle's place..'a little monster' clearly an unattractive personality. Marx's letters are really very effective descriptions. Lasalle is not in Marx's bad books at this time.< "This Fraulein, who really swamped me with her benevolence, is the most ugly creature I ever saw in my life, a nastily Jewish physiognomy, a sharply protruding thin nose, eternally smiling and grinning, always speaking poetical prose, constantly trying to say something extraordinary, playing at false enthusiasm, and spitting at her auditors during the trances of her ecstasies." Here, the 'little monster', is said to be the ugliest creature he ever saw in his life because of 'nasty' physical characteristics deemed to be Jewish, including a 'sharply protruding thin nose'. Doesn't make you blink? Let us continue. * Marx to Engels 7/30/62 > Here Lasalle gets it again... he is a 'Jewish nigger' and provided Marx with 'one of our nigger's great discoveries'.....and who thinks he ought to live the life of a 'Jewish Baron' etc etc who Marx is glad to see the back of... and the rest of the letter describes Lassalle in very amusing terms.< Anti-Semitism and racism is often cloaked in what some believe to be 'very amusing terms'. Amusing to whom, though? > It is very important to remember that the word Nigger in Victorian England, and indeed right up to the post ww2 period in Britain, simply meant black, or dark... a la painters' colour 'nigger black'. perhaps a distance was also intended in the way middle classes and above used it. But amongst working people it was straight description. A african, or even more accurately, a West African. < Some items to note: 1) Marx was not a product of Victorian England. His comments have to be judged in relation to the standards of the sub-culture that he was part of -- the European socialist movement. The use of that word was not by any means acceptable in that culture in that time. 2) Marx was very well aware of a derogatory meaning to that word. Let us, after all, recall that he had been a reporter on the US Civil War. He was also in contact with revolutionary socialists and organizations in the US at this time (although the First International wasn't founded until 1864). 3) In *all* cases when using this word it was used in a clearly derogatory context. It was only used, in other words, when attempting to *insult* Lassalle. 4) "It is now completely clear to me that he, as is proved by his cranial formation and hair -- descends from the Negroes who had joined Moses' exodus from Egypt (assuming his mother or grandmother on the paternal side had not interbred with a *nigger* [in English]). Now this union of Judaism and Germanism with a basic Negro substance must produce a peculiar product. The obtrusiveness of the fellow is also *Nigger*-like [in English]" (emphasis in original, JL). Still not blinking? 5) Note 'Jewish' and 'N...' are clearly used in a derogatory way and in *combination* with each other. As in the 3/24/61 letter above, there are also negative comments about alleged Jewish (and Black) physical characteristics. * Marx to Engels 8/21/75 > he refers to ' a crafty little jew' who climbed into Marx's railway carriage, who laments to Marx over being taken in by a trader. I assume he wasn't a crafty 'tall' Jew, and so Marx wasn't misrepresenting him, for the account shows he was consciously crafty. The description seems as fair as Marx's rendering of the man's accent (apparently cockney... perhaps accented). How on earth this is anti semetic beats me. It is a Dickensian portrait. < My translation reads 'a cunning-looking Jew-boy [Judel]'. Yet, again, 'Jew-boy' is used to describe a Jewish *man*. Also, this term is repeated many times in this letter. * Marx to Engels 8/25/79 > Ramsgate ' Place is full of Jews and fleas'. This is a gratuitous remark. Given his own father's break from the religion and culture, Marx's experience no doubt occassioned a reference that we might not have made. Why should we expect tolerance of any religion in such a man ? I find it difficult not to mutter when I see religion stalking the world in any guise. Marx's private expressions of this sort were so few that one would have had to have been a saint's saint to have not made the occasional dismissive/irritated remark.< You are the one who is muddying the issue here: Marx's comment was not about Judaism or religion *at all*. "Many Jews and bedbugs hereabouts". Is that _only_ 'gratuitous'? * Marx to Jenny Longuet 4/11/81 > I can find nothing here (except the lovely description of Kautsky). Referring again to Lassalle: 'the cynical, oily-obtrusive, phony Baronial Jew-manners". What a far cry from the courage of Eleanor Marx who: "though only half-Jewish, proclaimed constantly and with a certain defiant pride at workers' meetings in the East End of London: 'I am a Jewess'" (McLellan _Karl Marx_, p. 5). One might attempt to excuse Marx's comments by virtue of the fact that they were made in private correspondence and not intended for publication. Yet, this is often the case with anti-Semitism (and racism) since in many cultures (including the specific sub-culture that Marx was a part of) individuals know that such sentiments can not be publicly expressed without a negative backlash. That these were not innocent comments can also be seen by the fact that in his published writings they were _not_ used. This is because had he done so he would have been loudly and publicly condemned by progressives and revolutionaries the world over. It doesn't speak well for Engels or his other correspondents that they did not challenge him on his comments. In solidarity, Jerry PS: Just got your [6492]. Thanks for the clarification: it saved me from having to respond to issues that are not in question. On Paul Z's response [6493]: as late as the 1960's in the US there were 'restricted' neighborhoods and organizations that explicitly and in writing excluded Jewish and Black members. Exclusion continues to persist -- but not in writing or officially.
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