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Really Existing Nationalism

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Really Existing Nationalisms challenges the conventional view that Marx and Engels lacked the theoretical resources needed to understand nationalism. It argues that the two thinkers had a sophisticated insight into the subject, and that the reasoning behind their policy towards specific national movements was often subtle and sensitive to the ethical issues at stake.

Erica Benner identifies arguments in Marx and Engels’ writings that can help us to think more clearly about national identity and conflict today.

288 pages, Paperback

First published February 1, 1995

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Erica Benner

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Marks54.
1,547 reviews1,215 followers
January 10, 2021
This book is a detailed trip “through the weeds” to identify a better sense of how Marx and Engels handled questions, concerns, and events associated with ideas of “nationalism”. These paucity of ideas around nationalism has been seen as a shortcoming in traditional views of Marx and Engels. Not surprisingly, Marx and Engels have much more to say about nationalism than conventional accounts suggest. It turns out that they were not strict Marxists after all and that their analysis of nationalist issues was thoughtful and even practical in understanding 19th century history. At least that is the claim. Given the importance of and destruction wrought by unchecked nationalism into the mid-20th and even early 21st century, that makes for an interesting book. It is a bit of a slog, as you might expect from this sort of reinterpretation exercise, but the book is worth reading.

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3 reviews
July 13, 2020
Well-structured and very clear, with some startlingly relevant insights for today.
21 reviews
February 10, 2024
It should be noted from the outset that while this is a book concerned primarily with Marx’s reporting on 19th century national movements, both reactionary and emancipatory, the author is a political philosopher and not a historian. The source material examined is thus the journalistic and epistolary writings of Marx, and not to a significant extent any other documentary material on the independence and unification movements of Germany, Poland, the Balkan countries, India, and Ireland, to name the primary examples cited. In her examination of Marx’s writing against facile, reductive, and likely bad-faith interpretations of his theories by mid-20th century Western political scholars, Erica Benner surely played an important role in rescuing Marx’s actual ideas in the 1990s from the rubble of authoritarian projects superficially undertaken in his name in the decades prior. In these sections, which make up the bulk of Really Existing Nationalisms’ middle, Benner is at her strongest, displaying an expansive familiarity with Marx’s less examined works, which she deftly shows are overlooked at our peril in preference for his more abstract, declarative earlier writing like the Manifesto. But in her reliance on Marx, she also runs into the same roadblocks as the 19th century scholar, defending his thin pronouncements on Indian anti-colonialism where Kevin B. Anderson, in his wonderful Marx at the Margins, is less afraid to call out remnants of counterproductive Orientalism. Passages like these are mercifully infrequent however, though the same can hardly be said for the at-times tedious exposition of what Benner calls ‘methodological nationalism,’ which eat up the first half of many of the book’s sections only to be subsequently bowled over by Marx’s wrecking ball. I get the sense that these parts of the book are the result of at least one overweening advisor or reviewer, as this is after all a dissertation made into a book at a time when positively reassessing Marx was hardly in vogue, and positing alternatives to capitalism was reflexively conflated with purges and the gulag. The final chapter, The Revenge of Nations, with its nearly quotation-free examination of ‘liberal post-nationalism,’ is especially painful in this regard, going to great lengths to avoid mention of class or socialism, which of course in the conclusion of a book about Marx comes across as hopelessly tortured. And the sudden turn to current events, with audacious claims like “fears that populist nationalism was the wave of central Europe’s future proved premature,” is as confusing from an editorial standpoint as it is dated. In short: come for the beautifully curated passages from Marx’s lesser-known and incredibly prescient writing on nationalism (and as a bonus, see Engels faltering before complex geopolitical dynamics time and again), but spare yourself when the urge to skim arises. You won’t regret skipping repetitive explanations of the book’s thesis or its overly generous description of negative theoretical examples.
Profile Image for R.
82 reviews10 followers
December 14, 2024
It’s ok but I don’t really like analysis like this that is constrained to contemporary facts from Marx’s, it just feels like historiography
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