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Marx After Marx

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Revisiting Marx’s seminal conception of capital and production to better critique our diverse global economies.
  • 27 October 2015
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In Marx After Marx, Harry Harootunian questions the claims of Western Marxism and its presumption of the final completion of capitalism. If this shift in Marxism reflected the recognition that the expected revolutions were not forthcoming in the years before World War II, its Cold War afterlife helped to both unify the West in its struggle with the Soviet Union and bolster the belief that capitalism remained dominant in the contest over progress.

This book deprovincializes Marx and the West's cultural turn by returning to the theorist's earlier explanations of capital's origins and development, which followed a trajectory beyond Euro-America to Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Marx's expansive view shows how local circumstances, time, and culture intervened to reshape capital's system of production in these regions. His outline of a diversified global capitalism was much more robust than was his sketch of the English experience in Capital and helps explain the disparate routes that evolved during the twentieth century. Engaging with the texts of Lenin, Luxemburg, Gramsci, and other pivotal theorists, Harootunian strips contemporary Marxism of its cultural preoccupation by reasserting the deep relevance of history.

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Price: $120.00
Pages: 312
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 27 October 2015
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231174800
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / Social History, POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Ideologies / Communism, Post-Communism & Socialism, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Labor & Industrial Relations, HISTORY / World
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Harry Harootunian is singularly qualified to give us a Marxism adequate to the conditions of a genuine 'world' (as against a Hegelian 'universalist') history in a global age. The Marx who emerges from this book is a nuanced, empirical, and genuinely historical thinker instead of the pseudo-scientific 'philosopher of history' met with in textbook accounts of Western Marxism.
Harry Harootunian is Max Palevsky Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Chicago, professor emeritus of East Asia studies at New York University, and adjunct senior research scholar at the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University. He is also the author of History’s Disquiet: Modernity, Cultural Practice, and the Question of Everyday Life (Columbia, 2000) and Overcome by Modernity: History, Culture, and Community in Interwar Japan (2000).

Acknowledgments
Introduction: Deprovincializing Marx
1. Marx, Time, History
2. Marxism's Eastward Migration
3. Opening to the Global South
4. Theorizing Late Development and the "Persistence of Feudal Remnants": Wang Yanan, Yamada Moritarō, and Uno Kōzō
5. Colonial/Postcolonial
Afterword: World History and the Everyday
Notes
Index