
Political Economy from Pufendorf to Marx
culture, needs and property rights
$329.44
- Hardcover
302 pages
- Release Date
30 September 2025
Summary
From Natural Law to Marx: Unearthing the Roots of Communism
István Hont (1947–2013), a visionary scholar of European political thought, left behind a treasure trove of unpublished material after his death. This book unveils seven of his groundbreaking essays, offering a revolutionary intellectual history of the Marxian concept of communism and tracing its origins back to seventeenth-century natural jurisprudence, specifically Samuel Pufendorf.
Hont masterfully integrates the…
Book Details
ISBN-13: | 9781009597586 |
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ISBN-10: | 1009597582 |
Author: | István Hont, Lasse S. Andersen, Béla Kapossy, Richard Whatmore |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Imprint: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Hardcover |
Number of Pages: | 302 |
Release Date: | 30 September 2025 |
Weight: | 0g |
About The Author
István Hont
István Hont (1947–2013) was born in Hungary, before defecting from the communist regime and moving to the United Kingdom in 1975. He became a Fellow at King’s College, Cambridge in 1978 and a University Reader in the History of Political Thought. Hont was renowned globally as a leading intellectual historian of political economy, although much of his writing remained unpublished during his lifetime. His co-edited volume with Michael Ignatieff Wealth and Virtue: The Shaping of Political Economy in the Scottish Enlightenment (1983) and his collected essays Jealousy of Trade: International Competition and the Nation-state in Historical Perspective (2005) combine political theory with intellectual history and seek to illuminate contemporary debates.
Lasse S. Andersen is Associate Director of the Institute of Intellectual History at the University of St Andrews. He has published articles on the history of political thought and political economy.
Béla Kapossy is a professor of Early Modern History at the University of Lausanne. He is the author of many works concerned with enlightenment politics and political economy including Iselin contra Rousseau: Sociable Patriotism and the History of Mankind (2006), and a number of edited works and editions including Commerce and Peace in the Enlightenment (2016) and Edward Gibbon et Lausanne (2022).
Richard Whatmore is Professor of Modern History at the University of St Andrews and co-director of the Institute of Intellectual History. His most recent books are The End of Enlightenment (2023) and The History of Political Thought: A Very Short Introduction (2021).
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