19TH CENTURY THINKERS WHO CHANGED THE WORLD
Europe in the 19th century was the scene of extraordinary upheaval. The French Revolution had unlocked the doors to progressive ideas such as freedom for all from poverty and suffering, the widening of life's opportunities and universal brotherhood. Then, Napoleon's occupation of most of the Continent had raised further hopes for the rule of law and the improvement of conditions for the common man. Upon Napoleon's defeat, the reactionary forces of the ruling class took control again and it appeared as if nothing had ultimately been gained, that nothing had changed since the days of the ancien regime.
It was in this period that a number of philosophers, poets and artists sought to regain the revolutionary momentum - and it was their efforts that lay behind the establishment of Socialism, Anarchism and Communism.
The best-known of these thinkers was Karl Marx (possibly the most influential individual of the last millennium), self-appointed leader of the Socialist movement that led in the next century to the Russian Revolution, Lenin and Stalin. But Shlomo Barer, the author of this stupendous study of obsessed agitators, also brings into the big picture the greatest of German lyric poets and political commentator, Heinrich Heine; the hitherto obscure personality of Moses Hess, who may rank as the first Communist of all; two Russians of aristocratic background who were prepared to throw over all their wealth and privilege to fight for social and economic change, Alexander Herzen and Michael Bakunin; and Ferdinand Lasalle, the young German firebrand who might have outclassed all the others had he not died young in a ridiculous duel.
Barer explores the childhood, education and young adult-hood of these remarkable men, and presents in lively detail their families, their loves, their mistresses and wives, their friends, and the way their lives all criss-crossed. He also paints in the political and cultural background so that the Russian Tsars and French Kings are brought to life, not to mention such illustrious personalities as George Sand and her circle, Meyerbeer the opera composer, Ivan Turgenev; Balzac, Georg Herwegh and a host of others.
Barer offers us history in the grand style, painting a broad canvas of a society in turmoil and of minds at work to set it right. He has produced a book of epic dimensions; a narrative whose continually moving plot holds the reader's attention throughout and of a magnitude and depth that will make it indispensable to the student of modern political and social literature.
Contains pages of b/w photographs.