List of contributors to Marxist theory

This is a list of prominent figures who contributed to Marxist theory, principally as authors; it is not intended to list politicians who happen(ed) to be a member of an ostensibly communist political party or other organisation.

NamePlace of birthPlace of deathNationalityLifeTendency
Victor AdlerPrague, Austria-HungaryVienna, AustriaAustria Austrian1852–1918Social democracy, Austro-Marxism
Theodor W. Adorno[1]Frankfurt am Main, Hesse-Nassau Province, Prussia, GermanyVisp, Visp, Valais, SwitzerlandGermany German1903–1969Frankfurt School, Western Marxism
Louis AlthusserBirmendreïs, French AlgeriaParis, FranceFrance French1918–1990Western Marxism, Structural Marxism, Leninism
Samir AminCairo, EgyptParis, FranceEgypt Egyptian and France French1931–2018Third Worldism, Maoism, World-systems theory
Otto BauerVienna, Austria-HungaryParis, FranceAustria Austrian1881–1938Social Democracy, Austro-Marxism
Walter Benjamin[2][3][4]Berlin, German EmpirePortbou, Catalonia, SpainGermany German1892–1940Western Marxism, Marxist hermeneutics
Franco "Bifo" BerardiBologna, ItalyStill LivingItaly Italian1949–Autonomism
Eduard BernsteinSchöneberg, German ConfederationBerlin, GermanyGermany German1850–1932Social democracy, Marxist revisionism
Caio Prado JúniorSão Paulo, BrazilSão Paulo, BrazilBrazil Brazilian1907–1990Marxism
Ernst Bloch[5]Ludwigshafen, GermanyTübingen, West GermanyGermany German1885–1977Western Marxism, Marxist hermeneutics, Marxist humanism
Amadeo BordigaErcolano, Kingdom of ItalyFormia, ItalyItaly Italian1889–1970Italian Left communism, Leninism
Bertolt Brecht[6]Augsburg, German EmpireEast Berlin, East GermanyGermany German1898–1956Marxist literary criticism
Nikolai BukharinMoscow, Russian EmpireKommunarka shooting ground, Russian SFSR, Soviet UnionRussia Russian1888–1938Bolshevism, Left communism (initially), Right opposition (later on)
Jacques CamattePlan-de-Cuques, Alpes-Maritimes, FranceStill livingFrance French1935–Bordigism, Anarcho-primitivism (later on), Communization (later on)
Cornelius Castoriadis[7]Constantinople, Ottoman EmpireParis, FranceGreece Greek and France French1922–1997Western Marxism, Post-Marxism, Psychoanalytic Marxism, Libertarian socialism
Debiprasad Chattopadhyaya[8]Calcutta, British RajCalcutta, IndiaIndia Indian1918–1993Marxism
V. Gordon ChildeSydney, Colony of New South WalesBlackheath, New South Wales, AustraliaAustralia Australian1892–1957Marxist archaeology
G. A. CohenMontreal, Quebec, CanadaOxford, EnglandCanada Canadian1941–2009Analytical Marxism
James ConnollyCowgate, Edinburgh, Scotland, United KingdomKilmainham Gaol, Dublin, IrelandRepublic of Ireland Irish and Scotland Scottish1868–1916Marxism, Irish republicanism
Onorato DamenMonte San Pietrangeli, ItalyMilanItaly Italian1893–1979Italian Left communism
Gilles DauvéFranceStill livingFrance French1947–Left communism, Communization
Angela DavisBirmingham, AlabamaStill LivingUnited States American1944–Marxist feminism
Guy DebordParis, FranceBellevue-la-Montagne, Haute-Loire, FranceFrance French1931–1994Situationism
Daniel De LeonCuraçaoNew York, State of New York, United StatesUnited States American1852–1914De Leonism, Syndicalism
Joseph Dietzgen[9]Blankenberg (now Hennef, German ConfederationChicago, Illinois, United StatesGermany German1828–1888Marxism
Raya DunayevskayaYaryshev, Russian Empire (today, Vinnytsia Oblast, Ukraine)Chicago, Illinois, United StatesUnited States American1910–1987Marxist humanism
Terry EagletonSalford, Lancashire, England, United KingdomStill livingUnited Kingdom British1942–Marxism
Antony EasthopeKingston-upon-Thames, United KingdomManchester, United KingdomUnited Kingdom British1939–1999Psychoanalytic Marxism, Marxist literary criticism
Arghiri EmmanuelPatras, GreeceParis, FranceGreece Greek1911–2001Unequal exchange
Friedrich EngelsBarmen, Kingdom of Prussia (today Wuppertal, Germany)London, United KingdomGermany German1820–1895Classical Marxism
Frantz FanonFort-de-France, Martinique, FranceBethesda, Maryland, United StatesFrance French1925–1961Marxist humanism, Pan-Africanism, Decolonization
John Bellamy FosterSeattle, Washington, United StatesStill livingUnited States American1953–Marxism
Herman GorterWormerveerSaint-Josse-ten-Noode, BrusselsNetherlands Dutch1864–1927Council communism
Antonio GramsciAles, Sardinia, ItalyRome, Lazio, ItalyItaly Italian1891–1937Gramscianism, Western Marxism, Marxist humanism, Neo-Marxism
Ernesto "Che" Guevara[10][11][12]Rosario, Santa Fe, ArgentinaLa Higuera, Vallegrande, BoliviaArgentina Argentine1928–1967Marxism-Leninism, Guevarism
Abimael Guzmán (Gonzalo)[13][better source needed]Arequipa, PeruCallao, PeruPeru Peruvian1934–2021Marxism-Leninism-Maoism, Gonzalo thought
Ted GrantGermiston, South AfricaLondon, United KingdomSouth Africa South African and United Kingdom British1913–2006Trotskyism
David HarveyGillingham, Kent, England, United KingdomStill livingUnited Kingdom British1935–Marxist geography
Harry HaywoodSouth Omaha, Nebraska, United StatesAnn Arbor, Michigan, United StatesUnited States American1898–1985Marxism-Leninism
Rudolf HilferdingVienna, Austria-HungaryParis, FranceAustria Austrian and Germany German1877–1941Austro-Marxism
Max HorkheimerZuffenhausen (now Stuttgart), Württemberg, German EmpireNuremberg, Bavaria, West GermanyGermany German1895–1973Frankfurt School, Western Marxism
Ho Chi MinhNghệ An Province, French IndochinaHanoi, North VietnamVietnam Vietnamese1890–1969Marxism-Leninism, Ho Chi Minh Thought
Enver HoxhaErgiri (today Gjirokastër), Janina Vilayet, Ottoman EmpireTirana, People's Socialist Republic of AlbaniaAlbania Albanian1908–1985Marxism-Leninism, Mao Zedong Thought (initially), Hoxhaism
C.L.R. JamesTrinidadLondon, United KingdomTrinidad and Tobago Trinidadian and United Kingdom British1901–1989Marxism, Pan-Africanism, Anti-Stalinist left
Fredric JamesonCleveland, Ohio, United StatesStill livingUnited States American1934–Western Marxism, Marxist hermeneutics
Kojin Karatani[citation needed]Amagasaki, Hyogo Prefecture, JapanStill livingJapan Japanese1941–Marxist literary criticism
Edvard Kardelj[citation needed]Ljubljana, Duchy of Carniola, Austria-HungaryLjubljana, Socialist Federal Republic of YugoslaviaSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavian1910–1979Titoism
Karl KautskyPrague, Austria-HungaryAmsterdam, NetherlandsCzech Republic Czech, Austria Austrian and Germany German1854–1938Orthodox Marxism
İbrahim Kaypakkaya[citation needed]Çorum, TurkeyÇorum, TurkeyTurkey Turkish1949–1973Maoism
Kim Il-Sung[citation needed]Chingjong, KoreaHyangsan, KoreaNorth Korea Korean1912–1994Marxism-Leninism, Juche
Jim Kemmy[citation needed]Limerick, IrelandLimerick, IrelandRepublic of Ireland Irish1936–1997Marxism
Alexandra Kollontai[14]St Petersburg, Russian EmpireMoscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet1872–1952Marxist feminism, Bolshevism
Karl KorschTostedt, German EmpireBelmont, Massachusetts, United StatesGermany German1886–1961Western Marxism
Damodar Dharmananda KosambiKosben, (now Goa) British RajPune, Maharashtra, IndiaIndia Indian1907–1966Marxism
Yalçın Küçük[citation needed]İskenderun, Hatay, TurkeyStill livingTurkey Turkish1938–Marxism
Antonio LabriolaCassino, Papal StatesRome, Kingdom of ItalyItaly Italian1843–1904Marxism
Paul LafargueSantiago de CubaDraveil, FranceFrance French1842–1911Marxism, Anti-work
Henri Lefebvre[15]Hagetmau, FranceNavarrenx, FranceFrance French1901–1991Western Marxism, Hegelian Marxism
Vladimir LeninSimbirsk, Russian EmpireGorki Leninskiye, Russian SFSR, Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet1870–1924Leninism, Bolshevism
Karl LiebknechtLeipzig, Kingdom of Saxony, German EmpireBerlin, Weimar RepublicGermany German1871–1919Spartacism
Domenico LosurdoSannicandro di Bari, Kingdom of ItalyAncona, ItalyItaly Italian1941–2018Marxism
Georg LukácsBudapest, Austria-HungaryBudapest, People's Republic of HungaryHungary Hungarian1885–1971Budapest School, Western Marxism, Hegelian Marxism, Leninism
Rosa LuxemburgZamość, Vistula Land, Russian EmpireBerlin, GermanyPoland Polish and Germany German1871–1919Spartacism
Herbert MarcuseBerlin, German EmpireStarnberg, West GermanyGermany German1898–1979Frankfurt School, Western Marxism
José Carlos Mariátegui[16][17]Moquegua, PeruLima, PeruPeru Peruvian1894–1930Marxism, Sorelianism
Karl MarxTrier, Kingdom of PrussiaLondon, United KingdomKingdom of Prussia Prussian and Germany German1818–1883Classical Marxism
Paul MattickStolp, Pomerania, German Empire (now Poland)Cambridge, Massachusetts, United StatesGermany German1904–1981Council communism
Andy MerrifieldLiverpool, Merseyside, England, United KingdomStill livingUnited Kingdom British1960–"Magical Marxism"
István MészárosBudapest, HungaryMargate, EnglandHungary Hungary1930–2017Marxism
Antonio NegriPadua, ItalyParis, FranceItaly Italian1933–2023Autonomism
Kwame NkrumahNkroful, Gold Coast (now Ghana)Bucharest, RomaniaGhana Ghanaian1909–1972Nkrumahism
Abdullah Öcalan[citation needed]Ömerli, Şanlıurfa, TurkeyStill livingTurkey Turkish Kurdish1948–Democratic confederalism
Sylvia Pankhurst[citation needed]Manchester, Lancashire, England, United KingdomAddis Ababa, EthiopiaUnited Kingdom British and Ethiopia Ethiopian1882–1960Council communism
Anton PannekoekVaassen, NetherlandsWageningen, NetherlandsNetherlands Dutch1873–1960Council communism
Evgeny PashukanisStaritsa, Russian EmpireSoviet UnionRussia Russian1891–1937Leninism
Georgi PlekhanovGudalovka (now Gryazinsky District), Tambov Governorate, Russian EmpireTerijoki, FinlandRussia Russian1856–1918Marxism
Bijan Jazani[citation needed]Tehran, IranTehran, IranIran Iranian1938–1975Marxism
Nicos PoulantzasAthens, GreeceParis, FranceGreece Greek1936–1979Structural Marxism, Leninism (initially), Democratic socialism (later on)
Isaak Illich RubinDinaburg, Russian EmpireAktobe, Kazakh SSR, USSRSoviet Union Soviet Union1886–1937Marxism
Jean-Paul SartreParis, FranceParis, FranceFrance French1905–1980Neo-Marxism, Existentialism
Jose Maria Sison[18][19][better source needed]Ilocos Sur, PhilippinesUtrecht, NetherlandsPhilippines Filipino1939 - 2022Marxism-Leninism-Maoism
Alfred Sohn-RethelNeuilly-sur-Seine, FranceBremen, West GermanyGermany German1899–1990Marxism
Mahdi Amel[citation needed]Harouf, LebanonBeirut, LebanonLebanon Lebanese1936–1987Marxism
Joseph Stalin[20][21]Gori, Tiflis Governorate, Russian EmpireKuntsevo Dacha near Moscow, Russian SFSR, Soviet UnionSoviet Union Soviet1878–1953Marxism-Leninism, Stalinism
Paul SweezyNew York City, New York, United StatesLarchmont, New York (state), United StatesUnited States American1910–2004Neo-Marxism
Josip Broz Tito [dubious ]Kumrovec, Croatia-Slavonia, Austria-HungaryLjubljana, SR Slovenia, SFR YugoslaviaSocialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavian1892–1980Marxism-Leninism, Titoism
Leon TrotskyYelizavetgrad, Kherson Governorate, Russian EmpireCoyoacán, Distrito Federal, MexicoSoviet Union Soviet1879–1940Leninism, Bolshevism, Trotskyism
Alberto ToscanoItalyStill livingItaly Italy1977–Western Marxism
Raymond WilliamsLlanfihangel Crucorney, Wales, United KingdomSaffron Walden, England, United KingdomUnited Kingdom British (Wales Welsh)1921–1988Western Marxism, New Left
Karl August WittfogelWoltersdorf, Lower Saxony, Province of Hanover, German EmpireNew York, State of New York, United StatesGermany German and United States American1896–1988Marxism
Mao ZedongShaoshan, Hunan, Qing DynastyBeijing, People's Republic of ChinaChina Chinese1893–1976Marxism-Leninism, Maoism
Slavoj ŽižekLjubljana, SR Slovenia, SFR YugoslaviaStill livingSlovenia Slovene (Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia Yugoslavian before Dissolution of Yugoslavia)1949–Western Marxism, Hegelian Marxism, Psychoanalytic Marxism

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Peter Uwe Hohendahl "Approaches to Adorno: a tentative typology" in Prismatic Thought: Theodor W. Adorno, authors: Theodor Wiesengrund Adorno, Peter Uwe Hohendahl, U of Nebraska Press, 1997 ISBN 0-8032-7305-3, ISBN 978-0-8032-7305-4, (3-20): 3.
  2. ^ "Walter Benjamin and Critical Theory". Ceasefire Magazine. 2013-04-04. Retrieved 2021-10-12.
  3. ^ "Walter Benjamin and the classical Marxist tradition • International Socialism". International Socialism. 2009-01-02. Retrieved 2021-10-12.
  4. ^ "Walter Benjamin's Marxist Critique". Caesura. 2021-07-13. Retrieved 2021-10-12.
  5. ^ Douglas Kellner and Harry O'Hara, "Utopia and Marxism in Ernst Bloch" New German Critique 9 (Autumn, 1976) 11-34: 11-13.
  6. ^ Louis Althusser http://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/althusser/1962/materialist-theatre.htm The ‘Piccolo Teatro’: Bertolazzi and Brecht Notes on a Materialist Theatre 1961
  7. ^ Sven Papke, Georg W. Oesterdiekhoff, Schlüsselwerke der Soziologie (in German), VS 2001, page 79
  8. ^ E.M.S. Namboodiripad, "Dialectical" Materialism and Dialectical "Materialism", Social Scientist, Vol 10 No 4 (Apr, 1982), pp.52-59
  9. ^ Anton Pannekoek: "The Standpoint and Significance of Josef Dietzgen's Philosophical Works" - Introduction to Joseph Dietzgen, The Positive Outcome of Philosophy, Chicago, 1928
  10. ^ "Che Guevara and Contemporary Revolutionary Movements", James Petras,Latin American Perspectives, Vol. 25, No. 4, Che Guevara and His Legacy (Jul., 1998), pp. 9-18
  11. ^ "Most theories of revolution seem to agree that certain preconditions must be met if a revolutionary situation is to arise. The peculiar contribution of Ernesto Che Guevara to understanding revolutions is that according to him such preconditions can be created." from "Che Guevara on Guerrilla Warfare Doctrine, Practice and Evaluation", Jose A. Moreno, Comparative Studies in Society and History, Vol. 12, No. 2 (Apr., 1970), pp. 114-133
  12. ^ "...guerrilla warfare is essentially political, and that for this reason the political cannot be counterposed to the military." Regis Debray on Guevara's theory of the "Foco", Revolution in the Revolution, Penguin Books, 1967 link
  13. ^ "GONZALO THOUGHT IS THE THEORETICAL FOUNDATION FOR THE COMMUNISTS OF TODAY". www.redsun.org. Retrieved 2021-10-12.
  14. ^ Ebert, Teresa L. "Left of Desire" in Cultural Logic: An Electronic Journal of Marxist Theory and Practice, 3:1-2 (1999): at §5¶52-53, Online: http://clogic.eserver.org/3-1&2/ebert.html Archived 2010-11-08 at the Wayback Machine last accessed: 20090704.
  15. ^ Friedmann, John (1987). Planning in the public domain: from knowledge to action. Princeton.
  16. ^ John Kraniauskas "From the Archive: Introduction to Maria´tegui" Journal of Latin American Cultural Studies, Vol. 10, No. 3, 2001 303-304. doi:10.1080/1356932012009006 3
  17. ^ Thomas Angotti "The Contributions of Jose Carlos Mariategui to Revolutionary Theory" Latin American Perspectives, Vol. 13, No. 2, Perspectives on Left Politics (Spring,1986), (33-57): 34-36; 38-42.
  18. ^ ""On the Philosophy of Marxism-Leninism-Maosim" by Jose Maria Sison: A Book Review". NDFP. 2021-06-21. Retrieved 2021-10-14.
  19. ^ Silverio, Ina Alleco (2011-02-22). "Jose Maria Sison: A Good Man Worth Defending". Bulatlat. Retrieved 2021-10-14.
  20. ^ Ben Agger "Critical Theory, Poststructuralism, Postmodernism: Their Sociological Relevance" Annual Review of Sociology Vol. 17: 105-131 doi:10.1146/annurev.so.17.080191.000541
  21. ^ M.B. Mitin, M.D. Kammari, G.F. Aleksandrovis "The Contribution of J.V. Stalin to Marxism-Leninism" trans 'Inter'[pseud.] in 'The Seventieth Anniversary of Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin', published in Izvestia Akademii Nauk SSSR, Seria Istorii i Filosofii, Tom VII, Izdatelstvo Akademii Nauk SSSR, Moscow, 1950, pp. 3-30. http://www.revolutionarydemocracy.org/rdv4n1/stalin70.htm