دسترسی نامحدود
برای کاربرانی که ثبت نام کرده اند
برای ارتباط با ما می توانید از طریق شماره موبایل زیر از طریق تماس و پیامک با ما در ارتباط باشید
در صورت عدم پاسخ گویی از طریق پیامک با پشتیبان در ارتباط باشید
برای کاربرانی که ثبت نام کرده اند
درصورت عدم همخوانی توضیحات با کتاب
از ساعت 7 صبح تا 10 شب
ویرایش:
نویسندگان: Marcello Musto
سری: Routledge Frontiers of Political Economy
ISBN (شابک) : 1032373075, 9781032373072
ناشر: Routledge
سال نشر: 2022
تعداد صفحات: 286
[287]
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 20 Mb
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Marx and Le Capital: Evaluation, History, Reception به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب مارکس و لو کاپیتال: ارزیابی، تاریخ، دریافت 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.
در چند سال گذشته، سرمایه مارکس مورد توجه دانشگاهی و عمومی قرار گرفته است. این جلد به تاریخچه ساخت، ارزیابی نظری و تحلیل انتشار و دریافت نسخه تقریباً ناشناخته سرمایه اختصاص دارد: ترجمه فرانسوی منتشر شده بین سالهای 1872 و 1875، که مارکس مستقیماً در آن شرکت داشت.
در تجدید نظر در این نسخه، مارکس تصمیم گرفت برخی از اضافات و اصلاحات را ارائه دهد، بدون تردید در توضیح در پساسکریپت Le Capital به عنوان "یک ارزش علمی مستقل از اصل". به مناسبت صد و پنجاهمین سالگرد ترجمه فرانسوی Capital (1872-2022)، 15 نویسنده به روشن کردن تاریخ و ویژگی های اصلی آن و همچنین تحلیل آن کمک کرده اند. ثروت های بعدی در فرانسه و سایر نقاط جهان. آنها همچنین گزارش جامع تری از ایده های مارکس «متأخر» ارائه می دهند. این کتاب همچنین شامل مجموعهای از 31 نامه است که قبلاً منتشر نشده بود از مکاتبات کارل مارکس، موریس لاشاتر، ژوست ورنویه و فردریش انگلس مربوط به ساخت Le Capital. 10 مورد از این نامه های مارکس اخیراً دوباره کشف شد و برای اولین بار در اینجا به زبان انگلیسی ترجمه شده است.
این کتاب منبعی ضروری برای جوامع دانشگاهی است که به طور فزاینده ای علاقه مند به کشف مجدد مارکس فراتر از مارکسیسم قرن بیستم هستند. علاوه بر این، برای دانشجویان فارغ التحصیل، و همچنین دانشمندان با سابقه و علاقه مند به سوسیالیسم فرانسه و تاریخ جنبش کارگری جذاب خواهد بود.
Over the past few years, Marx’s Capital has received renewed academic and popular attention. This volume is dedicated to the history of the making, the theoretical evaluation, and the analysis of the dissemination and reception of an almost unknown version of Capital: the French translation, published between 1872 and 1875, to which Marx participated directly.
In revising this version, Marx decided to introduce some additions and modifications, not hesitating to describe in the postscript Le Capital as ‘a scientific value independent of the original’. To mark the 150th anniversary of the French translation of Capital (1872-2022), 15 authors have helped to shed light on its history and main features, as well as analysing its later fortunes in France and in the rest of the world. They also provide a more exhaustive account of the ideas of the "late" Marx. The book also includes a previously unpublished selection of 31 letters from correspondence of Karl Marx, Maurice Lachâtre, Just Vernouillet and Friedrich Engels related to the making of Le Capital. 10 of these letters by Marx were only recently rediscovered and are translated here for the first time in English.
This book is an indispensable source for academic communities who are increasingly interested in rediscovering Marx beyond 20th century Marxism. Moreover, it will be of appeal to graduate students, as well as established scholars, interested in French socialism and the history of the labour movement.
Cover Half Title Series Information Title Page Copyright Page Table of Contents About the Editor Contributors Note on the Text Preface Acknowledgements 1 Introduction: The Making and the Dissemination of Le Capital Capital: An Unfinished Masterpiece The Search for the Definitive Version of Volume I and Le Capital Marx Through Le Capital Notes References Part I The Value of Le Capital 2 Marx’s Capital After the Paris Commune: The Falling Rate of Employment and the Fate of the Working Class Introduction Marx’s Renaissance Hidden in Plain Sight Le Capital Redivivus Marx’s Capital and the First International Accumulation in Production, En Route to Circulation La Vie Accidentée Contradictions of the Employment Rate Irresistible Force, Immovable Object Harnessed to Capital Ambivalence, Or the Dialectic of Consciousness Self-emancipation? Notes References 3 Marx’s French Edition of Capital as Unexplored Territory: From the Centralization of Capital to Societies Beyond ... Marx’s Expressed View of the French Edition Engels’s Negative Assessment Creates a Conceptual Barrier Marx’s Explicit and Implicit Differences With Engels Over the French Edition Some Key Changes Incorporated By Engels From the French Edition, Especially On the Centralization of Capital Some Important Passages From the French Edition Excluded Or Ignored By Engels, Especially On Globalization and Multilinear ... Multilinear Social Development and Revolutionary Prospects Concluding Remarks: Centralization, Globalization, and Multilinearity Notes References 4 The French Edition of Capital and the Question of Colonialism The Roy Translation and the Colonial Question: A Clarification Utopian Socialism: The Source of Socialist Colonialism? ‘Colonisation’: The Realities of the Early 1870s A ‘Question of Method’: ‘Marxology’ and Capital Note References 5 Engels and Le Capital: The Politics of the Fourth Edition of Das Kapital (1890) Introduction Thinking Politically About the Economy Begin at the Beginning A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy Brave New World? Das Kapital as a Political Intervention Conclusion Notes References Part II The Making of Le Capital 6 Le Capital: A Transnational, Family and Personal Endeavour Introduction The Role of Karl Marx, His Relatives and His Friends in the Making of Le Capital Karl Marx Laura Marx and Paul Lafargue August Philips Friedrich Engels Jenny Marx (Mother and Daughter), Charles Longuet and Other Communards Other Contributions to the Publishing Process of Le Capital Joseph Roy Maurice Lachâtre The Printer Lahure Adolphe Dervaux Juste Vernouillet Adolphe Quêst Conclusion Notes References 7 From Moscow to Paris: The Russian Roots of the First French Translation of Marx’s Capital Introduction The Discovery of Russian Narodnism Simplifying Or Historicizing? Marx On Chernyshevsky’s Mill Conclusion Notes References 8 Reading Le Capital: Marx as a Translator Introduction: Divergent Reading A Common Hermeneutic Framework Marx as a Translator A Second Sample Conclusion Notes References 9 An Unfinished Project: Marx’s Last Words On Capital A Book Project Too Big for a Lifetime The French Edition of Capital, Volume I Marx and Engels in Disagreement Marx’s Plans for Further Editions of Capital, Volume I Marx’s Marginalia and the ‘Marginal Notes On Adolph Wagner’ Marx’s Final Words On Capital Engels’s Work On the Third and Fourth German Editions of Capital, Volume I Why Did Engels Not Follow All of Marx’s Instructions and Hints for Future Editions and Translations of Capital, Volume I Do We Need Another Revised Edition of Marx’s Capital, Volume I? Notes References Part III The Dissemination and the Reception of Le Capital 10 The Contradictory Reception of the French Edition of Capital Introduction and Methodology: On the Reception of Marx in France First Read By Its Opponents The French Translation of Capital and Militants’ Marxist Culture The Interwar Debates The Postwar Period, From Loyalty to Contestation Conclusion Notes References 11 A Tale of Two Translations: A Comparison of the Roy-Marx and Lefebvre Translations of Capital, Volume I Introduction Marx’ Semantic and Conceptual Architecture The Difficulty of Rendering the Consistency of What Is Real The Status of Marx’s Hegelianism in Capital Conclusion Notes References 12 The French Edition of Capital in Germany, France, Anglophone Countries, and Japan An Overview of the Influence of the French Edition in the Dissemination of Capital On the Significance of Le Capital in the 20th Century Recent Debates On Le Capital Futures of Le Capital Notes References Part IV Letters On Le Capital 13 ‘Selected Correspondence On the French Translation of Capital’ Introduction: Le Capital in the Shadow of the Paris Commune Karl Marx, Maurice Lachâtre, Just Vernouillet, and Friedrich Engels ‘Selected Correspondence On the French Translation of Capital’ 1. Karl Marx to Maurice Lachâtre 2. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 3. Karl Marx to Maurice Lachâtre 4. Karl Marx to Maurice Lachâtre 5. Karl Marx to Maurice Lachâtre 6. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 7. Karl Marx to Maurice Lachâtre 8. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 9. Just Vernouillet to Karl Marx 10. Karl Marx to Maurice Lachâtre 11. Just Vernouillet to Karl Marx 12. Karl Marx to Maurice Lachâtre 13. Friedrich Engels to Maurice Lachâtre 14. Karl Marx to Louis Lahure 15. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 16. Friedrich Engels to Maurice Lachâtre 17. Karl Marx to Maurice Lachâtre 18. Karl Marx to Just Vernouillet 19. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 20. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 21. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 22. Karl Marx to Maurice Lachâtre 23. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 24. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 25. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 26. Just Vernouillet to Karl Marx 27. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 28. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 29. Just Vernouillet to Karl Marx 30. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx 31. Maurice Lachâtre to Karl Marx Index