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Communist Manifesto
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The Communist Manifesto, written by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, is one of the most studied political and philosophical texts in academic history. Although it is a work of political theory, it appears frequently in literature courses because of its rhetorical power, its influence on later writers, and its role as a foundational text in critical theory. Students encounter it across disciplines including sociology, political science, history, and literary studies, often as part of broader examinations of post-Enlightenment political thought, capitalism, and class struggle. Its core arguments about the bourgeoisie, the proletariat, and the historical forces driving social change continue to generate serious academic debate.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some focus directly on Marx and Engels's central arguments, analyzing how the text frames capitalism and class conflict. Others adopt comparative frameworks, placing Marx in dialogue with thinkers such as John Stuart Mill, Max Weber, Émile Durkheim, and Gaetano Mosca to test competing sociological theories. A strong literary strand applies Marxist criticism to works like Richard Wright's Native Son or Franz Kafka's writing, using the Manifesto as a critical lens. Some essays address the contemporary relevance of Marx's ideas, asking whether his analysis of capitalism still holds explanatory power today.

A strong essay on this topic needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad summary of Marxist ideas. Evidence drawn from the primary text, supported by specific examples from history, sociology, or literature, carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating the Manifesto as a monolithic political statement without engaging critically with its assumptions or acknowledging counterarguments from other theoretical traditions.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Marx, Materialism, and Exploitation Marx\'s
Marx's philosophy of materialism may be said to lead to the conclusion that capitalism inevitably exploits the workers. This contention is still widely debated today; the increase in living standards for the proletariat…
Research Paper Doctorate
Marx, Engels, and Smith Capitalism
Capitalism does not create a marketplace of free and fair economic competition, rather it creates a state of human as well as economic subjugation. Or so said Karl Marx's co-author of the "Manifesto of the Communist…
Research Paper Doctorate
Marx and Madame Bovary: Literary and ideological perspectives
Analysis of Emma's character in the context of the Marx and Engels' "Communist Manifesto"
Paper Doctorate
Communist Manifesto and Industrial Revolution the Dominant
Communist Manifesto and Industrial Revolution
Research Paper Undergraduate
Review: Globalization Unplugged in Globalization
In Globalization Unplugged: Sovereignty and the Canadian State in the Twenty-First Century, Peter Urmetzer tackles the issue of whether globalization truly detracts from a country's sovereignty.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Capitalism, socialism, and communism: comparative analysis
The economic function of a society comprises of functions associated with the production and utilization of goods and services. From the most primitive period, the principal activity of planned society has been economic…
Paper Undergraduate
The Great Economists
This paper looks at some of the dominant economists and economic theories that we have studied over the course of the semester. The paper examines how many of these thinkers overlap and where they differ and how those differences often manifest. Furthermore, this paper also looks at what my favorite and least favorite economic theories were and why.
Paper Doctorate
Marx, Darwin, Heraclitus, and Parmenides
This paper compares Charles Darwin and Karl Marx and their philosophical similarities and differences. Both men saw that there was a great deal of violence and cruelty in the world. Darwin examined the animal world and saw that to survive a creature had to struggle. Marx saw a struggle between humans and how they were separated by class and money.