Marxist Literary Theory: A Reader
is designed to give both students and lecturers a sense of the historical formation of a Marxist literary tradition. A unique compilation of principal texts in that tradition, it offers the reader new ways of reading Marxism, literature, theory, and the social possibilities of writing.
Represented in this reader are: Theodor W. Adorno, Louis Althusser, Aijaz Ahmad, Chida Amuta, Etienne Balibar and Pierre Macherey, Roland Barthes, Walter Benjamin, Ernest Bloch, Bertolt Brecht, Alex Callinicos, Christopher Caudwell, Terry Eagleton, Friedrich Engels, Lucien Goldmann, Fredric Jameson, V. I. Lenin, George Lukacs, Karl Marx, The Marxist-Feminist Collective, Jean-Paul Sartre, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Leon Trotsky, V. N. Volosinov, Galvano Della Volpe, Alick West, and Raymond Williams.Introduction.
Part I: Terry Eagleton:.
Introduction.
Part II: Drew Milne.
1. Marx and Engels.
2. Leo Tolstoy and His Epoch (1911): V. I. Lenin.
3. The Formalist School of Peotry and Marxism: Leon Trotsky.
4. Corcerning the Relationship of the Basis and Superstructures: V. N. Volosinov.
5. Surrealism: The Last Snapshot of the European Intelligentsia (1929).
Addendum to 'The Paris of the Second Empire in Baudelaire' (1938): Walter Benjamin.
6. Marxism and Poetry (1935): Ernst Bloch.
7. English Poets: The Period of Primitive Accumulation (1937): Christopher Caudwell.
8. The Relativity of Literary Value (1937): Alick West.
9. A Short Organum for the Theatre (1949): Bertolt Brecht.
10. The Tasks of Brechtian Criticism (1956): Roland Barthes.
11. The Ideology of Modernism (1957): Georg Lukacs.
12. The Seml“r