In the 1920's and1930's , even in the non-Communist or anti-communist West, Communist true believers fought over who was the most authentic Marxist. (Trotsky was, and caught an ice ax in the head; Stalin wasn't but ruled a quarter century and died more or less in bed).
Actually, Rodney, this isn't at all true. Trotsky was a Stalinist before Stalin because Stalin basically STOLE all of Trotsky's ideas about the industrialization and collectivization of the masses, as well as the state's leading role in determining what was and was not permissible in all the cultural fields. Trotsky was not a true Marxist, any more than those French revolutionaries I mentioned before were "true" Marxists.
Roughly post-Stalin, Marx and Marxism were of interest almost sol;ely in academia, especially in the West. And there Marxism was still numero uno in the universities. The man in the street was sweating Soviet Communism, but not actually Marxism (Who actually reads Das Kapital and the Communist Manifesto?)
This is also not really true, Rodney. Think about it. When was the Cuban revolution and when were people like Fidel Castro and Che Guevarra most influential in Latin America? For that matter, you're neglecting to look at other Third World nations, most notably China under Mao, but also countries in Africa like Ethiopia. I assure you, Marxism-Leninism, whether interpreted by Stalin (borrowing heavily from Trotsky) or not, remained extremely influential until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989. That's when the Marxist-Leninist-Stalinist dream really exploded (or imploded, to speak more precisely).
In recent times Marxism is just not thought about, let alone understood (though maybe it should be). Thankfully, even the prevailing political correctness no longer completely protects Marxism. I relatively recently heard Marx called a crackpot, and I think that was quite on the money.
If people's largescale historical memory of the past century and a half could be erased (just a thought experiment, if you'll bear with me) and there had been no Karl Marx or Marxism as a famous person and ideology, his theories introduced under a different name would still not sell.
Again, I think you are somewhat confusing Marxism with its later interpretations by people like Lenin, Trotsky, Stalin, and Mao. The original writings are far more subtle and open to different interpretations, as all great writings are. Hence their enduring appeal. Believe me, Marxism continues to be influential not only in (remarkably successful) socialist countries like those in Scandinavia, but also in American, Canadian, and Western European academia, where Marxist theory has shed considerable light on the field of social history, which only really emerged in the 1960s. Although this "revisionist" school has recently given way to a "post-revisionist" school, it's still clear that even post-revisionists are heavily influenced by social history. The emphasis in Soviet and Russian studies now is not nearly so much on social history but on cultural and intellectual history. But even there, social historians of the 1960s-1980s made invaluable contributions in opening up previously unperceived paths of inquiry and interpretation.
Elisabeth, my statement about who was the most authentic Marxist, Trotsky, or Stalin? should better have said "more authentic" (that ol ' comparative/ superlative problem). Neither was a true Marxist, of course, but I think Trotsky was more so. He was closer to Lenin (half of the Marxism/ Leninism formulation) both personally and temperamentally. Stalin's appeal for Lenin was less his theoretical strength than his greater ability than Trotsky to consolidate the Soviet state appararus.
As for the influence of the Cuban revolution and the Castros and Che Guevara in Latin America, I think the appeal there was less Marxism than this: Castro was the most popular and chararismatic revolutionary in the world at that time, having fairly recently thrown out the despised Battista, an American puppet (among leftist rebels it doesn't get much better than that)Plus, there were those weapons ,funding ,and experienced Cuban trainers. If you're a poor group of Latin American rebels, these things are more critical to your success than pure Marxist theory.
The same applies to Castroite/Cuban influence in Africa, only more so. There, in Angola and Mozambique, Castro was also throwing in almost fifteen thousand regular Cuban Army soldiers.
Moreover , on both continents, if Marxism was thought to be the appeal,, then these budding revolutionary movements were doomed to failure. Marxist theory foresaw proletarian revolutions succeeding against societies in an advanced state of industrial capitalism. Mozambique, Angola, indeed most of Africa, even Peru, Bolivia, and Nicaragua need not apply.
Again, in all these places, whether Second or Third World, revolutionary movements developed for the usual reasons, most notably a desire to rid themselves of despotic or corrupt oppressors, and to escape the hopelessness and poverty of their daily lives. Communist revolutions however wrongly, were seen as the model . I don't think either the leaders of those movements, or even less so their generally uneducated followers in their masses, knew very much of or cared about Karl Marx.
,