Did Marx Defend Black Slavery? On Jamaica and Labour in a Black Skin

Historical Materialism 31 (3):135-158 (2023)
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Abstract

Over the past 40 years a tradition of Marx interpretation has built up around a single passage concerning black slavery in an 1853 letter from Marx to Engels, in order to demonstrate that Marx’s support for emancipation was conditional on the level of ‘civilization’ attained by black slaves. I will argue that this interpretation, which attempts to prove Marx’s racist defense of slavery, is overdetermined by an inattention to historical context and a hypersensitivity to Marx’s nineteenth-century epithets. This is important because the alleged anti-black racism of Marx and the place black workers occupy in his historical materialist vision of class struggle are of the utmost significance for properly conceptualizing the relationship between Marxism and black liberation.

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Gregory Slack
Middle Tennessee State University

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References found in this work

The German Ideology.Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels - 1939 - Science and Society 3 (4):563-568.
Marx and Haiti: Note on a Blank Space.Wulf D. Hund - 2021 - Journal of World Philosophies 6 (2):76-99.

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