

In addition to Bensaïd’s prescient work of political philosophy, The Dispossessed includes new translations of Marx’s original “theft of wood” articles and an introductory essay by Robert Nichols that lucidly contextualizes the essays. Brilliantly tacking between past and present, The Dispossessed discloses continuity and rupture in our relationships to property and, through that, to one another. Bensaïd studies these writings to interrogate how dispossession continues to function today as a key modality of power. In his series of articles from 1842–43 about Rhineland parliamentary debates over the privatization of public lands and criminalization of poverty under the rubric of the “theft of wood,” Marx identified broader anxieties about customary law, property rights, and capitalist efforts to privatize the commons. He was born in Italy, studied history at the University of Genoa and received his. War, fascism, genocide, revolution, and collective memory are the landmarks of his numerous books. His research focuses on the intellectual history and the political ideas of the twentieth century. In The Dispossessed, Daniel Bensaïd examines Karl Marx’s early writings to establish a new framework for addressing the rights of the poor, the idea of the commons, and private property as a social institution. Enzo Traverso is a historian of modern and contemporary Europe. Troubling developments in intellectual property, genomics, and biotechnology are undermining established concepts of property, while land appropriation and ecological crises reconfigure basic institutions of ownership.

The politics of dispossession are everywhere.
