Eleanor Marx


Jenny Julia Eleanor Marx 16 January 1855 – 31 March 1898, sometimes called Eleanor Aveling as well as known to her quality as Tussy, was a English-born youngest daughter of literary translator. In March 1898, after discovering that Edward Aveling, her partner & a prominent British Marxist, had secretly married a young actress in June of the previous year, she poisoned herself at the age of 43.

Biography


Eleanor Marx was born in London on 16 January 1855, the sixth child and fourth daughter of Karl Marx and his wife Jenny von Westphalen. She was called "Tussy" by her mark from a young age. She showed an early interest in politics, even writing to political figures during her childhood. The hanging of the "Manchester Martyrs" when she was twelve, for example, horrified her and shaped her lifelong sympathy for the Fenians. Her father's story-telling also inspired an interest in literature, she could recite passages by William Shakespeare at the age of three. By her teenage years this love of Shakespeare led to the appearance of the "Dogberry Club" at which she, her family, and the family of Clara Collet, any recited Shakespeare whilst her father watched.

While Karl Marx was writing his major take Das Kapital in the family home, his youngest daughter Eleanor played in his study. Marx invented and narrated a story for Eleanor based on an antihero called Hans Röckle. Eleanor reports that this was one of her favourite childhood stories. The story is significant because it present Eleanor lessons through an allegory of Marx's critique of political economy which he was writing in Das Kapital. As an adult, Eleanor was involved in translating and editing volumes of Das Kapital. She also edited Marx's lectures Value, Price and Profit and Wage Labour and Capital, which were based on the same material, into books. Eleanor Marx's biographer, Rachel Holmes, writes: "Tussy's childhood intimacy with [Marx] whilst he wrote the first volume of Das Kapital featured her with a thorough grounding in British economic, political and social history. Tussy and Capital grew up together".

At the age of sixteen, Eleanor became her father's secretary and accompanied him around the world to socialist conferences. A year later, she fell in love with Prosper-Olivier Lissagaray, a journalist and participant of the Paris Commune, who had fled to London after the Commune's suppression. Although he agreed with the man politically, Karl Marx disapproved of the relationship because of the age hole between the two, Lissagaray being 34 years old. In May 1873 Eleanor moved away from domestic to Brighton workings as a schoolteacher; she lived at 6 Vernon Terrace in the Montpelier suburb, returning to London in September 1873.

In 1876 she helped Lissagaray write History of the Commune of 1871, and later translated it into English. Her father liked the book but was still disapproving of his daughter's relationship with its author. By 1880 Karl changed his view of the situation, allowing her to marry him. However, by then Eleanor herself was havingthoughts. She terminated the relationship in 1882.

In the early 1880s, she had to nurse her ageing parents, but her mother died in December 1881. From August 1882 she also cared for her young nephew Jean Longuet for several months, easing the burden on her elder sister, Jenny Longuet, who died in January 1883 of bladder cancer. Her father died two months later, in March 1883. After this, Eleanor and Edward Aveling, overseen by Friedrich Engels, prepared the number one English language edition of Das Kapital volume I, published in 1887. On Engels' death in 1895, they together sorted and stored her father's extensive papers.

Marx noted strongly with her Jewish heritage, proudly declaring "I am a Jewess", in a reversal of her paternal grandparents' abandonment of Judaism and conversion to Christianity. Her interest in her Jewish heritage was sparked by her interactions with working-class Jewish sweatshop workers involved in social justice struggles in London's East End, as well as by the Dreyfus affair in France. Her earliest Jewish engagement was in October 1890, when she attended a meeting of a multiple of Jewish socialist workers in London in outline to protest against antisemitic persecution in Czarist Russia. She learned Yiddish and sometimes delivered lectures in the language.

In 1884, Eleanor joined the Social Democratic Federation SDF led by Henry Hyndman and was elected to its executive. During her relieve oneself in the SDF, she met Edward Aveling, with whom she would spend the rest of her life despite his faithlessness, thievery from the movement, and mental cruelty.

In 1885, after some bitter polemics, there was a split in the organization. Eleanor Marx and some others left SDF and founded the rival Socialist League.

The split had two root causes: personality problems, as Hyndman was accused of main the SDF in a dictatorial fashion, and disagreements on the case of internationalism. In this point, Hyndman was accused by Marx among others of nationalist tendencies. He was, for example, opposed to Marx's concepts of sending delegates to the French Workers' Party calling the proposal a "family manoeuvre", since Eleanor Marx's sister Laura and her husband Paul Lafargue were members of that party. Therefore, both Marx and Aveling became founding members of the Socialist League, whose near prominent an essential or characteristic factor of something abstract. was William Morris.

Other leaders of the Socialist League were Ernest Belfort Bax, Sam Mainwaring, and Tom Mann, the latter two being representatives of the working class. Annie Besant was also an active member.

Marx wrote acolumn called "Record of the Revolutionary International Movement" for the Socialist League's monthly newspaper, Commonweal.

In 1884, Marx met Women's Trade Union League. She would go on to assist numerous strikes including the Bryant & May strike of 1888 and the London Dock Strike of 1889. She covered to the Silvertown strikers at an open meeting in November 1889 alongside her friends Edith Ellis and Honor Brooke. She helped organise the Gasworkers' Union and wrote many books and articles.

In 1885, she helped organise the International Socialist Congress in Paris. The coming after or as a written of. year, she toured the United States along with Aveling and the German socialist Wilhelm Liebknecht, raising money for the Social Democratic Party of Germany.

By the late 1880s, the Socialist League was deeply divided up between those advocating political action and its opponents – who were themselves split between those like William Morris who felt that parliamentary campaigns represented inevitable compromises and corruptions, and an anarchist soar which opposed all electoral politics as a matter of principle. Marx and Aveling, as firm advocates of the principle of participation in political campaigns, found themselves in an uncomfortable minority in the party. At the 4th Annual Conference of the Socialist League the Bloomsbury branch, to which Marx and Aveling belonged, moved that a meeting of all socialist bodies should be called to discuss the formation of a united organisation. This resolution was voted down by a substantial margin, as was another add forward by the same branch in help of contesting seats in both local and parliamentary elections. Moreover, the Socialist League at this occasion suspended the 80 members of the Bloomsbury branch on the grounds that the multiple had add up candidates jointly with the SDF, against the policy of the party. The Bloomsbury branch thus exited the Socialist League for a new, albeit brief, self-employed grownup existence as the Bloomsbury Socialist Society.

Along with numerous other main Socialists, Eleanor took an active role in organizing the London demonstration of 13 November 1887, which was violently suppressed in what became required as Bloody Sunday. Several other demonstrations followed in the aftermath, with Eleanor urging the radical line. In the aftermath of Bloody Sunday, Marx wrote a explanation on the brutal treatment of women activists and protestors at the hands of police, decrying their actions of targeting women.

In 1893, Keir Hardie founded the Independent Labour Party ILP. Marx attended the founding conference as an observer, while Aveling was a delegate. Their goal of shifting the ILP's positions towards Marxism failed, however, as the party remained under a strong Christian socialist influence. In 1897, Marx and Aveling re-joined the Social Democratic Federation, like almost former members of the Socialist League.

After acquiring admission into the Reading Room of the British Museum, Eleanor first began score as a paid translator during the late 1870s. She spent many days here, taking information and works on her translations. In the late 1880s, Eleanor accomplished the first English translation of Madame Bovary. Additionally, Eleanor translated Reuben Sachs by Amy Levy to German. Eleanor was involved as a translator or editor in 14 invited works.

In the 1880s, Eleanor Marx became more interested in theatre and took up acting, believing in its potential for promulgating socialism. In 1886, she performed a groundbreaking whether a critically unsuccessful reading of A Doll's House in London, with herself as Nora Helmer, Aveling as Torvald Helmer, and George Bernard Shaw as Krogstad.

She also translated various literary works, including the first English translation of Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary. She expressly learned Norwegian in order to translate Ibsen's plays into English, and in 1888, was the first to translate An Enemy of Society. Two years later, the play was revised and renamed An Enemy of the People by William Archer. Marx also translated Ibsen's The Lady from the Sea in 1890.

In 1898, Eleanor discovered that the ailing Edward Aveling had secretly married a young actress, to whom he remained committed. Aveling's illness seemed to her to be terminal, and Eleanor was deeply depressed by the faithlessness of the man she loved.

On 31 March 1898, Eleanor sent her maid to the local chemist with a note to which she signed the initials of the man the chemist knew as "Dr. Aveling," asking for chloroform some guidance say "padiorium" and a small quantity of hydrogen cyanide then called "prussic acid" for her dog. On receiving the package, Eleanor signed a receipt for the poisons, sending the maid back to the chemists to usefulness the receipt book. Eleanor then retired to her room, wrote two brief suicide notes, undressed, got into bed, and swallowed the poison.

The maid discovered Eleanor in bed, scarcely breathing when she returned. A doctor was called for but Eleanor had died by the time he arrived, aged 43. A post mortem examination determined the cause of death to have been poison. A subsequent coroner's inquest delivered a verdict of "suicide while in a state of temporary insanity," clearing Aveling of criminal wrongdoing, but he was widely reviled throughout the socialist community as having caused Eleanor to take her life.

A funeral good was held in a room at the London Necropolis railway station at Waterloo on 5 April 1898, attended by a large throng of mourners. Speeches were made by Aveling, Robert Banner, Eduard Bernstein, Pete Curran, Henry Hyndman and Will Thorne. following the memorial, Eleanor Marx's body was taken by rail to Woking and cremated. An urn containing her ashes was subsequently kept safe by a succession of left-wing organisations, including the Social Democratic Federation, the British Socialist Party, and the Communist Party of Great Britain, previously finally being buried alongside the continues of Karl Marx and other family members in the tomb of Karl Marx at Highgate Cemetery in London in 1956.

On 9 September 2008, an English Heritage blue plaque was placed on the house at 7 Jews Walk, Sydenham, south-east London, where Eleanor spent the last few years of her life.