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  1. 1842 - 1911. Médico y socialista francés, autor de varias obras sobre la historia del marxismo. Fue uno de los fundadores del Partido Obrero francés en 1879. En la Asociación Internacional de los Obreros (la I Internacional) sirvió de secretario corresponsal para España entre 1866 y 1868 y fue miembro-fundador de sus secciones francesas ...

  2. 28 de nov. de 2022 · Paul Lafargue (1842–1911) was born in Santiago, Cuba, and lived there until the age of nine, when his family returned to their hometown of Bordeaux, France. In his early twenties, Lafargue began studying medicine in Paris, but after participating in a socialist gathering was barred from the French university system and left the country to continue his studies in London.

  3. 18 de dic. de 2022 · His most famous pamphlet, The Right to be Lazy, first drafted in 1880, was one of many attempts to awaken the revolutionary spirit of the French working class. That text, newly translated by Alex Andriesse, is once again widely available. It is a full-throated attack on the “love of work,” which Lafargue describes as a “mental aberration.”.

  4. 28 de nov. de 2022 · Paul Lafargue (1842–1911) was born in Santiago, Cuba, and lived there until the age of nine, when his family returned to their hometown of Bordeaux, France. In his early twenties, Lafargue began studying medicine in Paris, but after participating in a socialist gathering was barred from the French university system and left the country to continue his studies in London.

  5. Paul Lafargue was the disciple and son-in-law of Karl Marx. Together with Jules Guesde, he helped to found the first French socialist party, ated Socialist Workers' party of France, 1880). He also served as the chief theoretician of and propagandist for Marxism in France during. French legislature (1891-93).

  6. Paul Lafargue was born in Santiago, Cuba, on 16 June 1842, the son of a planter. His paternal grandmother was a mulatto from Santo Domingo, who fled from there during the French Revolution. His paternal grandfather was French, killed in the risings in Haiti. His maternal grandfather, Abraham Armagnac, was a French Jew and his maternal ...

  7. Lafargue proclaimed the right to be lazy. The Right to Be Lazy (French: Le Droit à la paresse) is a book by Paul Lafargue, published in 1883. In it, Lafargue, a French socialist, opposes the labour movement 's fight to expand wage labour rather than abolish or at least limit it. According to Lafargue, wage labour is tantamount to slavery, and ...