| Franz Mehring |
Article Index for Franz |
Website Links For Franz |
Information AboutFranz Mehring |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT FRANZ MEHRING | |
| german natives of pomerania | |
| german politicians | |
| 1846 births | |
| 1919 deaths | |
| SHOPPER'S DELIGHT | |
|
In 1891 Mehring joined the Social Democratic Party Of Germany (SPD). He worked for various daily and weekly newspapers and over many years wrote lead articles for the weekly magazine ''Neue Zeit''. In 1868 he moved to Berlin to study, and worked in the editorial office of the ''Die Zukunft'' newspaper. From 1871 – 1874 , Mehring worked for the Correspondence Office in Oldenburg , writing reports on sessions of the '' Reichstag '' and the local parliament. He became a well-known parliamentary reporter, working for the '' Frankfurter Zeitung '' newspaper and ''Die Waage'', a newspaper published by Leopold Sonnemann ( 1831 – 1909 ). Mehring left ''Die Waage'' after an argument with Sonnemann and in 1884 became chief editor of the liberal Berlin ''Volks-Zeitung'' newspaper. He spoke out against Bismarck ’s law banning Socialism although he was himself a member of the Bourgeoisie . Mehring was a strict dogmatic Marxist . His image of Friedrich Nietzsche as a Capitalist had large influences for the negative image that socialists and Communists in the 20th Century had of Nietzsche. Nietzsche was opposed to what he saw as the Collective ideology of Marxism, because he thought it left no room for the individual. The SPD remained an Autocratic party for decades, with no room for opposition. Mehring was a principal defender of the party dogmas. Between 1902 and 1907 Mehring was the chief editor of the Social Democratic ''Leipziger Volkszeitung'' newspaper. From 1906 to 1911 he taught at the SPD’s Party school. He was a member of the Prussian parliament from 1917 to 1918 . During the First World War Mehring began to distance himself from the SPD. In 1916 the left-wing Marxist revolutionary Spartacist League was founded and Mehring was one of its main leaders alongside Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg . Franz Mehring wrote a Marxist analysis of the actions of Swedish warrior king Gustavus Adolphus , claiming the Thirty Years' War had little to do with religion (the official explanation) and everything to do with economics (the Marxist explanation). |