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Isaak Illich Rubin

Isaak and Polonia Rubin, 1910

Isaak Illich Rubin (Russian: Исаак Ильич Рубин; 12 June 1886 – 27 November 1937) was a Soviet lawyer, Marxian economist and scholar of Marx's work. His most important publication was Essays on Marx's Theory of Value (first edition, 1923). His scholarly works, his textbooks and his popular lectures, e.g. at the Institute of Red Professors, made him an important influence on early Bolshevik Marx interpretation; but he was not himself a Bolshevik and was frequently jailed, then banished to Soviet Central Asia, then executed in 1937 during the Great Purge. Though books had been published about his controversial reading of Marx in the 20s, his work and memory had by then been completely expunged within the Soviet Union. Rubin was unknown in the West until the 1970s, when an English translation of his main work from a rare surviving copy appeared. Since that time he has been a major figure in scholarly disputes about Marx's value theory. In 1989-91 he was rehabilitated by the Soviet Union.[1]

  1. ^ "Рубин Исаак".

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