This the first of a new three-part series in which Antonio Negri, a leading political thinker of our time, explores key ideas that have animated radical thought and examines some of the social and economic forces that are shaping our world today. In this first volume Negri shows how the thinking of Marx and Foucault were brought together to create an original theoretical synthesis - particularly in the context of Italy from May ’68 onwards. At around that time, the structures of industry and production began to change radically, with the emergence of new producer-subjects and new fields of capitalist value creation. New concepts and theories were developed by Foucault, Deleuze and Guattari and others to help make sense of these and related developments - concepts such as biopower and biopolitics, subjectivation and subsumption, public and common, power and potentiality. These concepts and theories are examined by Negri within the broader context of the development of European philosophical discourse in the twentieth century. Marx and Foucault provides a unique account of the development of radical thought in the late 20th and early 21st centuries and will be a key text for anyone interested in radical politics today.
Antonio Negri is formerly Professor of State Theory at the University of Padua
Chapter 1IntroductionChapter 21. Why Marx?2. Reflections on the use of dialectics3. Thoughts regarding �critical foresight� in the unpublished Chapter VI of Marx�s Capital Vol. 14. Acting in common, and the limits of capital5. Is it possible to be communists without Marx?Chapter 31. An Italian breakpoint: production versus development2. On �Italian Theory�3. The constitution of the common and the logics of the left4. On the future of the European social democracies5. Let�s start reading Gramsci again6. Biopower / biopolitics Ð subjectivities in struggleChapter 41. On the method of political critique2. How and when I read Foucault3. Gilles Felix Ð the how and when of Deleuze-Guattari4. Observations on the �production of subjectivity�: on an intervention by Pierre Macherey5. Marx after Foucault: the subject refoundOrigin of the Texts
Michael Hardt, Antonio Negri, Duke University) Hardt, Michael (Director, Social Movements Lab, Director, Social Movements Lab, University of Padua and University of Paris VIII) Negri, Antonio (Professor Emeritus, Professor Emeritus