The Real Karl Marx
NYBooks Logo. Link to Homepage My Account Logout Site logo Politics Collapse Literature Collapse Arts Collapse Ideas Collapse Current Issue Current Issue More from the Review Events All Issues About Us Shop Literary Gifts Shop NYRB Classics The Real Karl Marx John Gray Jonathan Sperber’s ‘Karl Marx: A Nineteenth-Century Life’ May 9, 2013 issue Reviewed: Karl Marx: A Nineteenth-Century Life by Jonathan Sperber Liveright, 648 pp., $35.00 Bundesarchiv Berlin-Lichterfelde Karl Marx and his daughter Jenny, a left-wing journalist and her father’s secretary, in 1869. ‘The cross she is wearing,’ Jonathan Sperber writes, ‘was not a sign of religious affiliation but the symbol of the Polish uprising of 1863.’ In many ways, Jonathan Sperber suggests, Marx was “a backward-looking figure,” whose vision of the future was modeled on conditions quite different from any that prevail today: The view of Marx as a contemporary whose ideas are shaping the modern world has run its course and it is time for ...