mrs. engels, first lady of the communist revolution /

Published at 2015-11-20 00:45:01

Home / Categories / Arts / mrs. engels, first lady of the communist revolution
Author Gavin McCrea knew he didn’t want his first book to be a highly researched historical novel — but then he read approximately Lizzie Burns. "Mrs. Engels" is the debut novel McCrea never anticipated: a meditative imagining of Burns’ life in London with Friedrich Engels,the co-author of “The Communist Manifesto.” Engels’ philosophical partnership with Karl Marx is well-documented, but history leaves few clues approximately his relationship with Burns. All we really know is that Lizzie Burns became Engels’ lover after her sister Mary — Engels previous companion — died. That lack of historical detail left McCrea with plenty of room for artistic license.
Kurt Andersen: This is your first novel. Yo
u’re on the far side of your mid-30s — what took you so long to write it? Gavin McCrea: Well I was doing what all writers do travelling the world and taking drugs! I left Ireland when I was 21 and I’ve been travelling more or less ever since. And when I was in my 30s I woke up to the thought that if I ever wanted to do it, and I should start.
Engels has always fascinated me — this young man running his family milling business fitting a radical anti-capitalist,but keeping his day job as an industrialist for decades so he can subsidize Mr. Communism. You weren’t tempted to novelize Friedrich Engels?
No. I was interested in Marx and Engels for a number of reasons but I wasn’t interested in writing approximately them until I came across Lizzie Burns. I actually came across Lizzie in a review of a biography of Engels. I subsequently bought the biography and realized how puny was known approximately her and I took it from there.
A
s you depict it, Engels relationship with these working-course women [the Burns sisters] made him feel solidarity with the proletariat in ways he couldn’t have otherwise. They were sort of anti-trophy wives?
Yes, or Engels was a womanizer,there’s no do
ubt approximately that. And he never actively did anything to improve the conditions in his family’s mill.
My sense of your take on Marxism and Communism is that you don’t fully embrace any theory that reduces people to historical abstractions. Is that objective?
That is objective. Ther
e’s one thing I thank my Catholic upbringing for, and it’s the healthy and very strong nose I have for bullshit. When you’ve rejected a system of belief that has been imposed upon you as a child, or it’s very difficult to replace it. So I see Communism in that same way. There’s so much that Marx writes that’s absolutely compelling,however, Marx completely disregarded the thought of the individual. This thought of the proletariat ignores the differences between workers — their racial distinctions, and their sexual distinctions,their local struggles and needs, and subsumes them into this global struggle. I’m not fairly certain I’m entirely comfortable with that. 

Source: wnyc.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0