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John H. McClendon III's CLR James's Notes on Dialectics: Left Hegelianism or Marxism-Leninism? is the first-ever book devoted exclusively to James's 'magnum opus,' Notes on Dialectics: Hegel-Marx-Lenin. The seed for this study was planted over thirty years ago when James handed the author his personal copy of Notes. James's contribution to dialectical philosophy and his vast intellectual and scholarly output is rivalled only by the seemingly bottomless depths of McClendon's own analysis and erudition. McClendon provides a thorough-going critique of James's exploration into the dialectic of Hegel, Marx, and Lenin while challenging all the seminal texts on James's Notes'. A book of this magnitude is rare. This is ever more the truth when it is focused on a giant like James who stands at the nexus of so many disciplines: philosophy, history, sociology, Caribbean studies, cultural studies, African, and African American studies. CLR James's Notes on Dialectics: Left Hegelianism or Marxism-Leninism? is a must read for anyone concerned with how revolutionary theory is a guide to contemporary struggles.
John H. McClendon III is Associate Professor of African American Studies and American Cultural Studies at Bates College.
Chapter 1 Reminiscences of the James LegacyChapter 2 Political Context and Philosophical Locus: The Trotskyite/Stalinist PolemicChapter 3 James on Understanding and Reason: Kant, Hegel, and German IdealismChapter 4 Hegel's Idealism: Marxist Materialist Reading and InversionChapter 5 James's Locus as Marxist Philosopher: The Humanist/Anti-Humanist DebateChapter 6 Comparing Notes: James and Lenin on Hegel and Dialectical MaterialismChapter 7 Lenin's Theory of the Vanguard Party: Contra James's Self-Activity of the Proletariat8 Afterword: Beyond the Boundary of the Johnson-Forest Tendency
In passing over stodgy traditional Marxist writings, McClendon has focused on the stupendous West Indian thinker, C. L. R. James. Having received from James a personal copy of James' treatise, McClendon magnificently dissects and clarifies this research, persuasively arguing that James's Notes should be the first read for all contemporary Marxist scholars.