Abstract

ABSTRACT This article examines the rhetorical transformation of Malthus’s concept of the “redundant population” into what Marx and Engels relabeled the “surplus population” and the “industrial reserve army.” Three rhetorical functions can be observed in this transformation. First, the altered terminology served as a rhetorical marker for a place of theoretical disagreement about economic causality. “Rhetorical marker” refers to a subtle terminological modification that has manifold ramifications for meaning and understanding. Second, this reconstitution of the masses reinforced opposed assumptions about the relationship of people to technology, and third, it provided a type of embodied material proof for Marx’s and Engels’s revolutionary politics.

Journal
Advances in the History of Rhetoric
Published
2014-01-02
DOI
10.1080/15362426.2014.886933
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Citation Context

Cited by in this index (1)

  1. Advances in the History of Rhetoric

Cites in this index (1)

  1. Rhetoric Society Quarterly
Also cites 2 works outside this index ↓
  1. Constitutive Rhetoric: The Case of the Peuple Québécois
    Quarterly Journal of Speech  
  2. The Principles of Political Economy and Taxation
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