Abstract
Karl Marx’s high academic stature outside of economics diverges sharply from his peripheral influence within the discipline, particularly after nineteenth-century developments rendered the labor theory of value ob-solete. We hypothesize that the 1917 Russian Revolution is responsible for elevating Marx into the academic mainstream. Using the synthetic control method, we construct a counterfactual for Marx’s citation patterns in Google Ngram data. This allows us to predict how often Marx would have been cited if the Russian Revolution had not happened. We find a significant treatment effect, meaning that Marx’s academic stature today owes a substantial debt to political happenstance.
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CITATION STYLE
Magness, P. W., & Makovi, M. (2023). The Mainstreaming of Marx: Measuring the Effect of the Russian Revolution on Karl Marx’s Influence. Journal of Political Economy, 131(6), 1507–1545. https://doi.org/10.1086/722933
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