[lbo-talk] Marx on women

Charles Brown cbrown at michiganlegal.org
Mon Apr 26 10:01:55 PDT 2004


From: andie nachgeborenen

Can someone lay quick hands on the source and text of the passage where Marx says, roughly, that you can tell the measure or level of a civilization by its treatment of women?

Btw, good work to all who did the DC action; I think that puts some legislatures, judges, and the Bushies, on notice.

Jks

^^^^^

Hello JKS,

"From this relationship one can therefore judge man's whole level of development."

CB ^^^^

http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1844/manuscripts/comm.htm

In the approach to woman as the spoil and hand-maid of communal lust is expressed the infinite degradation in which man exists for himself, for the secret of this approach has its unambiguous, decisive, plain and undisguised expression in the relation of man to woman and in the manner in which the direct and natural species-relationship is conceived. The direct, natural, and necessary relation of person to person is the relation of man to woman. In this natural species-relationship man's relation to nature is immediately his relation to man, just as his relation to man is immediately his relation to nature - his own natural destination. In this relationship, therefore, is sensuously manifested, reduced to an observable fact, the extent to which the human essence has become nature to man, or to which nature to him has become the human essence of man.


>From this relationship one can therefore judge man's whole level of
development. From the character of this relationship follows how much man as a species-being, as man, has come to be himself and to comprehend himself; the relation of man to woman is the most natural relation of human being to human being. It therefore reveals the extent to which man's natural behaviour has become human, or the extent to which the human essence in him has become a natural essence - the extent to which his human nature has come to be natural to him. This relationship also reveals the extent to which man's need has become a human need; the extent to which, therefore, the other person as a person has become for him a need - the extent to which he in his individual existence is at the same time a social being.



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