Tuesday, February 5, 2013

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Engels, as a German social scientistauthorpolitical theoristphilosopher, and father of Marxist-theory (The German Ideology, Marx and Engels, 1970) who commonly known as a "ruthless party tactician" devoted almost all his attention to the state of working-class neighborhoods. He takes the reader on a walking tour of the "great towns" with the intention of showing the reality of urban life, almost like a Dantesque tour of Inferno (Watch http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0368363/) or “Before Sunset” (2004, Watch http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0381681/).


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Engels took his readers on a journey through the slums and ghettos of London. It was interesting how he began describing the beauty and greatness of the cities and how he dragged the audience down to “human turmoil”.
In one side, he saw no correlation between dwellers and in other side found them strongly tied (Like what Mark Granovetter argues in the “Strength of the Week Ties”, 1973)!
 He followed a sinus curve and made so many ups and downs to introduce readers to one of the most important aspects of the metropolitans; “Social Interactions”. Look at this;

“All human beings …same qualities and powers”
“They had nothing in common…”
“People with the same interest…”
“Nothing to do with one other”
“Individual are crowded together”
“The war of each against all”

In other words, Engels described the estrangement that afflicts the London 1840.

Wait ! Something do not change, I saw this city somewhere! New York City! Read the article again; change “London” by “New York City” and change “1840” by “2013”. Nothing’s really changed. You will see the same city’s gesture.

Jane Jacob (1916-2006) pursued the same school of thought as Engels (Symbolic Internationalism, George Herbert Mead). In her influential book (The Death and Life of Great American Cities, 1961), she introduced the sociological concept of “Social Capital” almost in the same way Engels did, and considered the city as a node of “social bargains”.





 Endnotes

-    The "Theories of Surplus Value" are contained in the Collected Works of Marx and Englels: Volumes 30, 31 and 32 (International Publishers: New York, 1988).
-   A copy of Frederick Engels' birth certificate is located on page 577 of the Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels: Volume 2(New York: International Publishers, 1975).
-   Isaiah Berlin, Karl Marx: His Life and Environment p. 160
-   Frederick Engels' letter to Karl Marx contained in the "Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels
-  The three part series of articles called The Condition of England is contained in the Collected Works of Karl Marx and Frederick Engels
-   Tucker, Robert C. The Marx-Engels Reader
-    Arts and Artisans at Home and Abroad, by J. C. Symons, Edinburgh, 1839. The author, as it seems, himself a Scotchman, is a Liberal, and consequently fanatically opposed to every independent movement of working-men. The passages here cited are to be found p. 116 et seq.–Note by Engels
-   Nassau W. Senior, Letters on the Factory Act to the Rt. Hon., the President of the Board of Trade (Chas. Poulett Thomson, Esq.), London, 1837, p. 24.– Note by Engels







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