Marxist Class Theory For A Skeptical World
Häftad, Engelska, 2018
739 kr
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2018-07-31
- Mått152 x 230 x 36 mm
- Vikt940 g
- FormatHäftad
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor684
- FörlagHaymarket Books
- ISBN9781608469291
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Raju J. Das, Ph.D., Ohio State University, is a Professor at York University. He has published the monograph A Contribution to the Critique of Contemporary Capitalism (Nova Publishers, 2014), and articles in many journals, including Capital and Class and Science and Society.
- List of Figures and Tables ... viiiAcknowledgements ... ix 1 Introduction ... 1 2 Analytical Marxist Theory of Class ... 221 Main Concepts in Analytical Marxist Theory of Class ... 242 Connecting Core Class-Concepts, and Levels of Class-Analysis ... 513 Class Analysis, Struggle for Socialism, and Socialist Strategies ... 544 Conceptual Advantages of Wright’s Theory of Class ... 605 Wright’s Class Theory in Relation to His Marxist Social Theory ... 656 Conclusion ... 70 3 Anti-essentialist (Post-structuralist) Marxist Theory of Class ... 741 Post-structuralist Marxist Notion of Class Relation ... 762 Class Agency/Struggle and Geography of Capitalism ... 833 Class Theory as a Part of Marxist Social Theory in Anti-essentialist Marxism: The Principle of Non-dominance ... 894 The Politics of Anti-essentialist Marxism or Class Politics of Distribution ... 985 Semiotic/Linguistic/Emotional Resistance and Intervention ... 1066 Conclusion ... 109 4 A Critique of Theories of Class in Analytical and Anti-essentialist Marxisms ... 1111 Class and Property ... 1122 Class, Surplus, and Exploitation ... 1183 The Primacy of Class and of Capitalist Class Relations ... 1254 Problematic Conception of Class-Agency and Anti-capitalism ... 1345 A Reformist View of Post-capitalist Politics ... 1456 Class Character of Revisions to the Marxist Theory of Class: Theories and Interests ... 1597 Conclusion ... 164 5 Philosophical Foundations of Class Theory ... 1751 Marxist Philosophy: A Brief Statement of Basic Principles ... 1752 Philosophy and Class Theory ... 1993 Conclusion ... 208 6 Class Theory at a Trans-historical Scale ... 2121 Class in All Class Societies: Class, Property, and Exploitation ... 2132 Historically Specific Form of Class: Class in Pre-capitalist Society ... 2283 Objective Conditions, Class Struggle, Class Consciousenss and Transition in Class Form of Society ... 2334 Class and the State: Political Oppression as a Part of Class Relation ... 2395 Conclusion ... 243 7 Marxist Theory of Capitalism as Class: A Dialectics of Exchange, Property and Value Relations ... 2491 Capitalist Class Relation as Exchange/Money Relation ... 2522 Capitalist Class Relation as Property Relation ... 2583 Capitalist Class Relation as a Relation of Value ... 2624 Money Relation, Property Relation, and Value Relation all Internally Connected ... 2735 Concrete Map of Class Relations in Capitalist Social Formation ... 2886 Objective Effects of Class Relations on the Working Class: Suffering and Immiserization ... 3067 Conclusion ... 313 8 Subsumptions of Labour by Capital: Theory of Capitalist Class Relation from an International Perspective ... 3401 How is Capitalism Conceptualized? ... 3422 Formal and Real Subsumptions of Labour as Forms of Capitalist Class Relation ... 3453 Transition from Formal Subsumption, and the Mediation of Class Struggle ... 3534 Imperialism, Subsumption of Labour under Capital, and Class ... 3595 Misconceptions about Subsumption of Labour and Dominant Contradiction in Modern Society ... 3676 Summary, and Theoretical and Political Implications ... 376 9 The Capitalist State as Constitutive of Capitalist Class Relation: Class Exploitation and Political Oppression ... 3911 The Capitalist State and the Capitalist Class Relation ... 3922 Democratic State Form and the Capitalist Class Relation ... 3993 Capitalist Class Relations and Barrier to Working Class Access to State Power ... 4024 Conclusion ... 409 10 Dialectics of Class Consciousness ... 4151 Consciousness of the Bourgeoisie ... 4172 Consciousness of the Working Class and Its Multiple Forms ... 4283 Capitalist Class Relation and Working Class Consciousness ... 4384 Class Consciousness, Objectivism and Workers’ Struggle: Somegeneral Considerations ... 4535 ‘Marxist Elitism’ and Class Consciousness ... 4626 Conclusion ... 471 11 Trade Unionist Struggle and the Proletariat ... 4831 Struggle from Above and Struggle from Below ... 4842 ‘Primitive’ Revolts of the Working Class ... 4873 Trade Union Struggle ... 4894 What Makes (Spontaneous or Trade Unionist) Struggle Necessaryand Possible? ... 493 12 Class Struggle and the Proletariat ... 5091 A Marxist Critique of Spontaneous Trade Unionist Struggle ... 5102 Trade Union Struggle is a (Subordinate) Part of Class Struggle ... 5143 Revolution as the Ultimate Form of Class Struggle ... 5254 Revolutionary Role of the Proletariat ... 5355 Political Hegemony of the Proletariat ... 5456 Political Vehicles for Class Struggle ... 5507 Conclusion ... 556 13 Conclusions, and Further Reflections on the Political Implications of Class Theory ... 5661 Marxist Philosophy and Class Theory at a Trans-historical Level ... 5792 The Totality of the Capitalist Class Relation ... 5863 The Capitalist Class Relation, Internationally Speaking ... 6054 The State and the (Capitalist) Class Relation ... 6135 (Working) Class Consciousness and (Working) Class Power ... 616 Works Cited ... 635Index ... 662
"While most of the 'Left' seems to have forgotten about class, class has not forgotten about us. For it continues to divide all of us in ways that lead to our worst problems, but also —when properly understood—to their only adequate solution. Enter Raju Das, who makes the most impressive case I've seen for why this assault on class misrepresents Marx, but, even more important, badly distorts the workings of the oppressive system in which we live, voiding any serious attempt to replace it with a better one. The subject of this book could not be more important, particularly now, and both Das' scholarship and his politics in dealing with it receive highest Marx from this reader."—Professor Bertell Ollman, Department of Politics, NYU, author of Alienation & Dance of the Dialectic "This book is a tour de force. It offers a bold, detailed, compelling, and historically grounded examination of the Marxian concepts of class, class relations and class exploitation, and the different ways in which they have been understood in the literature. In doing this, Raju Das demonstrates the relevance of Marxist political economy, the centrality of class for understanding economic, social and political outcomes in the current age of neoliberal capitalism, and the continuing necessity of class analysis and class activity for social transformation."—Alfredo Saad-Filho, SOAS University of London "An extensive and thorough exposition of the Marxist theory of class that answers criticisms, especially post-structuralist, while offering its own alternative based firmly in Marxism."—Professor Richard Peet, Graduate School of Geography, Clark University "Offering a careful immanent critique of Analytical and Post-Structuralist Marxisms, Raju Das persuasively argues that orthodox Marxist class analysis supplies the best framework for understanding the rapacity of contemporary capitalism, as well as the best—indeed, the only—strategy for revolutionary social transformation. Of particular value are his insistent yoking of class theory to political economy; his view of class as both a relation and a process; and his skillful deployment of such fundamental concepts as materialism, dialectics, and totality. Amidst the plethora of recent approaches to social and cultural theory that purport to decenter or marginalize class struggle as the fundamental contradiction shaping the world today, or that substitute a focus upon neoliberalism for an examination of capitalism itself, Das’s book stands out for its rigor and eloquence. This book is just what our “skeptical world” needs to hear."—Barbara Foley, Distinguished Professor of English, Rutgers University, Newark “This book, by Raju Das, is among the most important works on Marxist class theory to appear in recent decades.” –Joseph Choonara, International Socialism Journal