251 Quotes About Marxism

  • Author Karl Marx
  • Quote

    Money is the universal, self-constituted value of all things. Hence it has robbed the whole world... of its proper value. Money is the alienated essence of man's labour and life, and this alien essence dominates him as he worships it.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Foucault Michel
  • Quote

    Marxism exists in nineteenth-century thought like a fish in water: that is, it is unable to breathe anywhere else.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Boris Gunjević
  • Quote

    Someday when we get around to writing a genealogy of our failures, inadequacies, and disappointments, an important place in such a study will be the books we never read, for whatever reason. Aside from the music we never listened to, the movies we never watched, or the old archives and maps we never explored, the books we never read will be one of the indicators of our anachronisms and our flawed humanity.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Slavoj Zizek
  • Quote

    [T]aking the Third into account does not bring us into the position of pragmatic consideration, of comparing different Others; the task is rather to learn to distinguish between "false" conflicts and the "true" conflict. For example, today's conflict between Western liberalism and religious fundamentalism is a "false" one, since it is based on the exclusion of the third term which is its "truth": the Leftist emancipatory position.

  • Tags
  • Share

  • Author Juan R Posadas
  • Quote

    Dialectic concepts can permit the existence of UFOs and other life-forms... Even if these reports of flying saucers are fantasies, as is possible that the majority may be, many of them, their historical basis is correct… the scientific capacity of human beings is determined by their social organisation... The answers to these mysteries would lie in a study of Marxism." From Les Soucoupes Volantes (Flying Saucers)

  • Tags
  • Share


  • Author Stathis Kouvelakis
  • Quote

    The event, in its emergence, poses its own premises, determining that they were the conditions for its realization. This transition is always the result of a salto mortale, which is a creative act in the sense that it gives the preceding links in the chain of events their meaning.

  • Tags
  • Share