ABSTRACT

In March 1843, eleven years a er Hegel’s death, authorities in the western German region of Westphalia closed down a newspaper called the Rheinische Zeitung, or the “Rhineland Gazette”. Among the people thrown out of work by this was the paper’s twenty- ve-year-old editor, Karl Marx. e newspaper itself was not very radical; its main audience was originally supposed to be businessmen, although a er Marx became editor it veered le wards. at the authorities could not tolerate even something as mildly progressive as the Gazette so disenchanted its editor that he decided to move abroad. A er marrying the following summer, Marx moved with his wife to Paris. is began a six-year migration, mostly forced, through Europe: in 1844 Karl and Jenny were expelled from France and moved to Brussels; a return to Germany in 1848 (to edit a revived version of the Gazette) did not work out; and in 1849 the couple arrived in London, where they lived for the rest of their lives. Marx died in 1883.1

AFTER HEGEL: PHILOSOPHY IN CONFUSION

at Marx was working at a newspaper at all calls for some explanation. He came from a family of distinguished rabbis, but had a father who, like many German Jews in those days, had converted to Christianity mainly for career reasons. Karl himself obtained a doctorate in philosophy from Jena, the university where Hegel had failed to become a professor, and had hoped to succeed, where Hegel had failed for so long, in nding an academic position. at Marx also failed, and de nitively, had much to do with the philosophical reaction in Germany to Hegel’s temporalizing of philosophy.