Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 March 2021
At the height of the struggle of the Paris Commune, as events were unfolding before his eyes, the German revolutionary Karl Marx described the Paris Commune of 1871 as an event of global, even “universal historical importance.” Yet in other texts – not only The Civil War in France, which assessed the results of the Paris insurgency – the same Marx severely criticized the strategic choices of the Commune or the limitations in its patriotic dimension. These writings may reveal an uncertainty in Marx’s analysis, but, most of all, they reflect the persisting uncertainty of the Paris Commune.
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