The Role of Force in History: A Study of Bismarck's Policy of Blood and Iron

by Friedrich Engels

Other authorsJack Cohen (Translator), Ernst Wangermann (Introduction)
Paperback, 1972

Pages

108

Status

Available

Call number

DD218.2.E613 1968

Publication

New York: International Publishers, c1968; Third Printing, 1972

Physical description

108 p.; 20.2 cm

ISBN

0717801721 / 9780717801725

Language

Original language

German

Description

"The Role of Force in History" was intended to be a pamphlet, but which Engels was never able to complete. It was to follow the three chapters in Anti-Duhring that are a critique of the theory of force. Engels wanted to elaborate the main ideas of these three chapters and add "The Role of Force..." as an example- using Germany history 1848-1888 to make a critical analysis of Bismarck's policies of blood and iron. Engels was never able to finish the work, begun in 1887. This edition brings the four pieces together. The general reader as well as students of Marx/Engels will find much food for thought, in our dangerous age, in this work.

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