Re: Marx / Engels sources

Paul Dillon (dillonph who-is-at northcoast.com)
Tue, 13 Jul 1999 12:01:42 -0700

Nate,

If interested, you might try this site, which has all of Ilyenkov's
Dialectical Logic.
http://www.werple.net.au/~andy/essayint.htm

Paul Dillon

-----Original Message-----
From: nate <schmolze who-is-at students.wisc.edu>
To: xmca who-is-at weber.ucsd.edu <xmca@weber.ucsd.edu>
Date: Tuesday, July 13, 1999 10:11 AM
Subject: Re: Marx / Engels sources

>Bruce,
>
>The site I was referring to was at: http://csf.colorado.edu/psn/marx/. It
>also has the search engine that Bruce was referring to.
>
>On the subject of Ilyenkov, I remember awhile ago Peter Jones mention a
>book by/about Ilyenkov which sounded very interesting, but was unable to
>find any record of such a book in the states.
>
>While on the topic (http://www.iscrat.org/) refers to the following book:
>*Activity Theory and Social Practice: Cultural-Historical Approaches*
>edited by Seth Chaiklin, Mariane Hedegaard, and Uffe Juul Jensen which
>seems very interesting but have been unable to find it either at Amazon or
>Barnes. ISCRAT makes it appear that the book is in circulation, is this not
>correct. It seems very interesting with chapters by Gita and Davydov among
>others.
>
>Nate
>
>
>
>> > Nate,
>> >
>> > You did mention a Marx/Engels site and that is what I was primarily
>asking
>> > about. To what were you referring? Do you have an http address?
>> >
>>
>> The Marx / Engels Internet Archive was at www.marx.org . I think it has
>now
>> moved to www.marxists.org - or at least it's definitely available there
>> together with many texts of other Marxists. There used to be a very
>useful
>> search engine to find where the elusive quote came from, but last time I
>> tried I couldn't find it.
>>
>> The English edition of the Marx / Engels collected works was published by
>> Lawrence and Wishart (rather than Progress Publishers) in the UK,
>probably
>> with an under the table subsidy from the USSR and came to a stop in the
>> early 90s, I think. The German MEGA (Gesamtausgabe) similarly stopped
>when
>> the GDR disappeared, but has now been taken up by the Institute of Social
>> History in Amsterdam.
>>
>> Bruce Robinson
>>
>>
>> > As far as progress publishers, they were great for inexpensive books on
>> > topics available noplace else; e.g., Ilyenkov.
>> >
>> > Paul
>> >
>> >
>>
>