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دانلود کتاب How to Read Marx's Capital: Commentary & Explanations on the Beginning Chapters

دانلود کتاب چگونه سرمایه مارکس را بخوانیم: تفسیر و تبیین فصل های آغازین

How to Read Marx's Capital: Commentary & Explanations on the Beginning Chapters

مشخصات کتاب

How to Read Marx's Capital: Commentary & Explanations on the Beginning Chapters

ویرایش: [1 ed.] 
نویسندگان:   
سری:  
ISBN (شابک) : 9781583678961, 9781583678954 
ناشر: Monthly Review Press 
سال نشر: 2021 
تعداد صفحات: 408
[409] 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 2 Mb 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 58,000



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توجه داشته باشید کتاب چگونه سرمایه مارکس را بخوانیم: تفسیر و تبیین فصل های آغازین نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.


توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب چگونه سرمایه مارکس را بخوانیم: تفسیر و تبیین فصل های آغازین

پی دی اف صفحه بندی شده با TOC مرتبط از ناشر با احیای اخیر نظریه کارل مارکس، علاقه عمومی به خواندن سرمایه نیز افزایش یافته است. اما کاپیتال - کار بنیادی مارکس در قرن نوزدهم در مورد اقتصاد سیاسی - به هیچ وجه متنی به راحتی قابل درک نیست. مفاهیم محوری، مانند کار انتزاعی، شکل ارزش، یا فتیشیسم کالاها، می توانند برای ما به عنوان اولین خوانندگان مبهم به نظر برسند، و دورنمای درک اندیشه مارکس می تواند واقعاً دلهره آور باشد. تا زمانی که کتاب «چگونه سرمایه مارکس را بخوانیم» اثر مایکل هاینریش را انتخاب کنیم. پاراگراف به پاراگراف، هاینریش توضیحات گسترده و توضیحات روشنی در مورد سؤالات و معماهایی ارائه می دهد که هنگام مواجهه با متن اصلی مارکس به وجود می آیند. ناگهان، فصول به ظاهر تلخی مانند «فرایند کار و فرآیند ارزش‌گذاری» و «پول یا گردش سرمایه» به طرز تازه‌ای روشن می‌شوند، زیرا هاینریش دقیقاً آنچه را که باید هنگام خواندن چنین متن پیچیده‌ای در ذهن داشته باشیم، توضیح می‌دهد. هاینریش با استفاده از ضمائم‌های متعدد با اشاره به دیگر نوشته‌های مرتبط مارکس، آنچه را که در مورد سرمایه مرتبط است و چرا باید امروز با آن درگیر شویم، آشکار می‌کند. چگونه سرمایه مارکس را بخوانیم یک راهنمای روشنگر و ضروری برای طبقه بندی ضایعات فرهنگی جهانی است که سیستم های سیاسی و اقتصادی آن همزمان در حال انفجار و انفجار هستند.


توضیحاتی درمورد کتاب به خارجی

Paginated PDF with Linked TOC From Publisher With the recent revival of Karl Marx's theory, a general interest in reading Capital has also increased. But Capital—Marx’s foundational nineteenth-century work on political economy—is by no means considered an easily understood text. Central concepts, such as abstract labor, the value-form, or the fetishism of commodities, can seem opaque to us as first-time readers, and the prospect of comprehending Marx’s thought can be truly daunting. Until, that is, we pick up Michael Heinrich’s How to Read Marx's Capital. Paragraph by paragraph, Heinrich provides extensive commentary and lucid explanations of questions and quandaries that arise when encountering Marx’s original text. Suddenly, such seemingly gnarly chapters as “The Labor Process and the Valorization Process” and “Money or the Circulation of Capital” become refreshingly clear, as Heinrich explains just what we need to keep in mind when reading such a complex text. Deploying multiple appendices referring to other pertinent writings by Marx, Heinrich reveals what is relevant about Capital, and why we need to engage with it today. How to Read Marx's Capital provides an illuminating and indispensable guide to sorting through cultural detritus of a world whose political and economic systems are simultaneously imploding and exploding.



فهرست مطالب

Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
Preface
Introduction
	Why Read Capital Today?
	Difficulties in Reading Capital
	How to Discuss Capital
	Various Types of Commentary
	Using the Commentary: An Initial Reading Plan
Commentary on the Beginning of Capital
	Capital. A Critique of Political Economy
	Preface to the First Edition (89–93)
		a) The Difficulty of the Beginning, “Bourgeois Society,” Abstraction (89–91)
		b) The Object of Investigation (90–91)
		c) People as Personifications of Economic Categories (92)
		d) Natural Laws of Capitalist Production (90–92)
		e) Scientific Inquiry and Social Struggles (92–93)
		f) The Three Volumes of Capital (93)
	Postface to the Second Edition (94–103)
	Contents (5–10)
Part One: Commodities and Money
	Chapter 1: The Commodity (125–177)
		1. The Two Factors of the Commodity: Use-Value and Value (Substance of Value, Magnitude of Value) (125–131)
			a) Introductory Paragraph: Wealth and the Commodity (Definition and Analysis) (125)
			b) Use-Value (last paragraph 125 to penultimate paragraph 126)
			c) Exchange-Value (Analysis and Construction) (last paragraph 126 to penultimate paragraph 127)
			d) Value and Substance of Value (final paragraph 127 to last paragraph 128)
				First Step of the Argument: The Common Element of the Commodities Is Not a Natural Property
				Second Step of the Argument: Only the Property of Being a Product of Labor Remains
				Third Step of the Argument: The Substance of Value Is Abstract Human Labor
			e) Magnitude of Value and Productivity (first paragraph 128 to first paragraph 131)
			f) Concluding Observation: Use-Value and Value (penultimate paragraph 131)
			g) Comments on the First Subsection’s Arguments
				The Commodity Character of Services
				Supply and Demand
				Conscious Action on the Part of Those Engaged in Exchange?
				Labor and Appropriation
				A Proof of Value Theory?
		2. The Dual Character of the Labor Embodied in Commodities (131–137)
			a) Introductory Paragraph: “Crucial” for Understanding Political Economy (final paragraph 131)
			b) Concrete, Useful Labor (first paragraph 132 to first paragraph 134)
			c) Abstract Human Labor, Simple and Complex Labor (second paragraph 134 to first paragraph 136)
			d) Final Remark, Physiology (last paragraph 137)
		3. The Value-Form, or Exchange-Value (138–163)
		Introduction: The Mystery of Money (138–139)
		(a) The Simple, Isolated, or Accidental Form of Value (139–154)
			1. The two poles of the expression of value: the relative form of value and the equivalent form
			2. The relative form of value
				(i) The content of the relative form of value
				(ii) The quantitative determinacy of the relative form of value
			3. The Equivalent Form
				The First Peculiarity of the Equivalent Form
				The Second Peculiarity of the Equivalent Form
				The Third Peculiarity of the Equivalent Form
				Excursus on Aristotle
			4. The Simple Form of Value Considered as a Whole
				The Independent Presentation of Value as Exchange-Value
				Insufficiencies of the Simple Form of Value
				Passing Over to the Expanded Form of Value (Characteristics of Conceptual Development)
		(b) The Total or Expanded Form of Value (154–157)
			(1) The expanded relative form of value
			(2) The particular equivalent form
			(3) Defects of the total or expanded form of value
		(c) The General Form of Value (157–162)
			(1) The changed character of the form of value
				The Historical Appearance of the Forms of Value
				The Changed Character of the Relative Form of Value
				The Changed Character of the Equivalent Form
			(2) The development of the relative and equivalent forms of value: their interdependence
			(3) The transition from the general form of value to the money form
		(d) The Money Form (162–163)
		4. The Fetishism of the Commodity and Its Secret (163–177)
			a) “Whence, then, arises the enigmatic character of the product of labour, as soon as it assumes the form of a commodity?” (163–165)
			b) The “Peculiar Social Character of the Labour which Produces Commodities”—Retroactive Socialization (second paragraph 165 to second paragraph 166)
			c) Knowledge of Value and “Objective Semblance” (third paragraph 166)
			d) The Society’s Movement Taking on a Life of its Own, and Its Content (second paragraph 167)
			e) “Objective Forms of Thought” (Objektive Gedankenformen) (second paragraph 168 to second paragraph 169)
			f) Forms of Production Not Based on Commodity Production (third paragraph 169 to last paragraph 173)
			g) Religion and Mode of Production (second paragraph 172 to first paragraph 173)
			h) Commodity and Value in Political Economy: The Analysis of Fetishism as a Precondition for a Critique of Political Economy (second paragraph 173 to 177)
	Chapter 2: The Process of Exchange (178–187)
		a) The New Level of Abstraction in Chapter 2
		b) The Process of Exchange and Commodity Owners (Private Owners) (178 to first paragraph 179)
		c) The Contradictory Requirements of the Exchange Process and Its Solution: Money (179 to first paragraph 181)
		d) The Historical Development of Commodity Exchange and Money (third paragraph 181 to third paragraph 184)
		e) Money-Form and Money Fetish (last paragraph 184 to 187)
	Chapter 3: Money, or the Circulation of Commodities (188–244)
		1. The Measure of Values
			a) Immanent Measure of Value and Money as Its Necessary Form of Appearance (188)
			b) Price and Ideal Money (189–190)
			c) Measure of Values and Standard of Prices (191 to second paragraph 195)
			d) Price and Value (last sentence of 195 to 198)
		2. Means of Circulation
			(a) The Metamorphosis of Commodities
				The Social Metabolism and Its Form Aspect (198 to third paragraph 199)
				Introduction to the Investigation of the Metamorphosis of the Commodity (last paragraph 199 to fourth paragraph 200)
				C – M. The First Metamorphosis: Sale (Supply and Demand on the Market for Commodities, Realization of the Price of the Commodity, Realization of the Ideal Use-Value of Money) (last paragraph 200 to first paragraph 205)
				M – C. Second Metamorphosis: Purchase (second paragraph 205 to first paragraph 206)
				The Completed Metamorphosis as a Whole (second paragraph 206 to second paragraph 207)
				The Difference Between the Circulation of Commodities and the Exchange of Products, “Social-natural Connections,” The Possibility of Crisis (third paragraph 207 to 209)
			(b) The Circulation of Money
				The Circulation of Commodities and the Semblance Generated by It (210 to third paragraph 212)
				The Amount of the Means of Circulation, Critique of Quantity Theory (final paragraph 212 to 220)
			(c) Coin. The Symbol of Value
				Coin in the Process of Circulation (second paragraph 222 to second paragraph 224)
				The “Law Peculiar to the Circulation of Paper Money” (third paragraph 224 to first paragraph 225)
				The Symbol of Money (second paragraph 225 to 227)
		3. Money
			(a) Hoarding
				The Hoard as a New Function of Money (227–228)
				“The Lust for Gold,” “The Hoarding Drive” (229 to third paragraph 231)
				The Function of Hoards for the Economy as a Whole, Consequences for the “Law Peculiar to the Circulation of Paper Money” (last paragraph 231)
			(b) Means of Payment
				Money’s New Function, New Economic Characteristics (232 to second paragraph 234)
				Means of Payment and Monetary Crisis (last paragraph 234 to first paragraph 237)
				The Total Amount of Money in Circulation (second paragraph 237 to 240)
			(c) World Money
Part Two: The Transformation of Money into Capital
	Chapter 4: The General Formula for Capital
		a) Historical Preconditions and Conceptual Point of Departure (first three paragraphs 247)
		b) Differences in Form Between C – M – C and M – C – M (last paragraph 247 to third paragraph 250)
		c) The Different Content of Each Form of Circuit: Capital as Valorized Value (last paragraph 250 to 253)
		d) The Capitalist (254 to first paragraph 255)
		e) Value as “Automatic Subject” and “Self-Moving Substance Which Passes Through a Process of Its Own” (second paragraph 255 to 257)
	Chapter 5: Contradictions in the General Formula
		a) Presentation of the Problem (258 to first paragraph 259)
		b) The Circulation of Commodities “In Its Pure Form”: The Exchange of Equivalents (second paragraph 259 to first paragraph 262)
		c) The Exchange of Non-Equivalents (third paragraph 262 to second paragraph 266)
		d) “Antediluvian Forms” of Capital (third paragraph 266 to 267)
		e) Valorization in Production? (first two paragraphs 268)
		f) The Result: Paradoxical Requirements of the Presentation (second paragraph 268 to 269)
	Chapter 6: The Sale and Purchase of Labor-Power
		a) On the Way to Solving the Puzzle: The Specific Commodity Labor-Power (Free Will and Objective Compulsion) (270 to third paragraph 272)
		b) The “Historical Imprint” of Economic Categories (second paragraph 273 to first paragraph 274)
		c) The Value of the Commodity Labor-Power (Class Struggle) (second paragraph 274 to first paragraph 279)
		d) Illustration and (Moral) Critique (footnote 14)
		e) The Use-Value of the Commodity Labor-Power (second paragraph 279 to first paragraph 280)
		f) The Sphere of Circulation and the Sphere of Production, Freedom, and Coercion (280)
Part Three: The Production of Absolute Surplus-Value
	Chapter 7: The Labor Process and the Valorization Process
		1. The Labor Process
			a) General Characteristics of the Human Labor Process, the “Nature” of Human Beings (second paragraph 283 to first paragraph 284)
			b) The Object of Labor, Instruments of Labor, Objectified (Concrete) Labor (second paragraph 284 to second paragraph 287)
			c) Product, Means of Production, Productive Labor, and (Concrete) Living Labor (third paragraph 287 to fourth paragraph 290)
			d) Levels of Abstraction of the Presentation (last paragraph 290 to first paragraph 291)
			e) The Labor Process as the Process by Which the Capitalist Consumes Labor-Power (the “Rebel” Workers) (second paragraph 291 to 292)
		2. The Valorization Process
			a) The Process of Creating Value (third paragraph 293 to second paragraph 298)
			b) The “Secret of Profit-Making” Revealed (third paragraph 298 to second paragraph 302)
			c) Conceptual Demarcations and Simple vs. Complex Labor (fourth paragraph 302 to 306)
			d) Looking Ahead
Appendix 1: Marx’s Critical Economic Writings
Appendix 2: The Universality of Labor as a Social Characteristic of “Labor that Posits Exchange Value” (from the Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy [1859], MECW 29: 273–275)
Appendix 3: A Paradoxical Form of Value (from Das Kapital, First Edition, [1867], MEGA II/5: 42–43, English: Dragstedt [1976, 32–34])
Appendix 4: Value-Objectivity as Objectivity Held in Common (from Ergänzungen und Veränderungen zum ersten Band des Kapitals [1871–72], MEGA II/6: 29–32)
Appendix 5: The “Transition to Capital” (from “Original Text of A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy” (Urtext) [1858], MECW 29: 478–499)
Appendix 6: Levels of Abstraction and the Course of Argument in the First Seven Chapters of Capital
	1. What Is Being Abstracted From
	2. Value, Money, and Fetish at Different Levels of the Presentation
	3. “Theoretical Developments” and Historical Process
Glossary
Bibliography




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