The Communist Manifesto: A Specter Haunting Europe
The most influential political pamphlet ever written — Marx and Engels's 1848 call for workers of the world to unite.
The Argument
Published in February 1848 — weeks before revolutions erupted across Europe — the Communist Manifesto is only about 12,000 words long. Its opening line is one of the most famous in political writing: 'A specter is haunting Europe — the specter of communism.'
The Manifesto makes three core arguments. First, all history is the history of class struggle — freeman vs. slave, lord vs. serf, bourgeois vs. proletarian. Second, capitalism has been revolutionary in its own way — Marx praises its productive power while arguing it creates the conditions for its own destruction. Third, the working class will inevitably overthrow capitalism and establish a classless society.
What makes the Manifesto remarkable is not just its analysis but its style. Marx and Engels wrote with literary force, creating phrases that entered everyday language: 'all that is solid melts into air,' 'the workers have nothing to lose but their chains,' 'workers of the world, unite!'