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The Evolution of Property from Savagery to Civilization

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Descriptions of different political approaches to acquiring property, ·Forms of Contemporaneous Property
·Primitive Communism
·Family or Consanguine Collectivism
·Feudal Property
·Bourgeois Property Born in Cuba on January 15, 1842, Lafargue was a child of the New World, although he was a citizen of France. Educated and trained as a physician, he found his true calling as a revolutionary, a speaker, writer, agitator, and organizer on behalf of French working people. He took an active part in the Paris Commune and was one of the founders of the party of revolutionary socialists in France. He held public office and represented the French workers at international congresses. He also spent time in French jails.

182 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1890

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About the author

Paul Lafargue

163 books92 followers
French revolutionary Marxist socialist and Karl Marx's son-in-law.Lafargue was born in Cuba to French and Creole parents. Karl Marx even once reffered to him by the n-word.

Lafargue his main work was called the right to be lazy. In which he calls upon not only the right to work, but also the right to be lazy. At the beginning of that book he claimed that the African slaves lived under better circumstances than the European worker.

At 69 he died together with his wife Laura in a suicide pact.

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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
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1,398 reviews8,477 followers
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January 10, 2026
Unannotated Book in F. Scott Fitzgerald's College of One
1 review4 followers
October 7, 2009
a true 'bible' for anthropologist
Profile Image for Wilson Tun.
179 reviews9 followers
December 23, 2025
An interesting anthropological analysis on how the concept of property came to be through the lens of Marxism. I don’t agree with it fundamentally considering how much nitpicking is involved to create the narrative that Communism “was natural order” forcefully destroyed and removed by Feudalism and its successor, Bourgeoisie Culture of Capitalism.
54 reviews1 follower
March 11, 2025
Great exploration of private property through the times, with examples. Lafargue shows how private property (and indeed capitalism) is not natural and is antithetical to community.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews