The Right to Be Lazy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Right To Be Lazy is an essay by Cuban-born French revolutionary Marxist Paul Lafargue, written from his prison cell in 1883. It polemicizes heavily against contemporary Liberal, Conservative and even Socialist ideas of work. Lafargues criticizes these ideas from a Marxist perspective as dogmatic and ultimately false by portraying the degeneration and enslavement of human existence when being subsumed under the primacy of the "right to work", and argues that laziness, combined with human creativity, is an important source of human progress.

[edit] External links

This article about a political book is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.