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دانلود کتاب The Bloomsbury Companion to Marx

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The Bloomsbury Companion to Marx

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The Bloomsbury Companion to Marx

ویرایش:  
نویسندگان: , ,   
سری: Bloomsbury Companions 
ISBN (شابک) : 9781474278713, 9781474278706 
ناشر: Bloomsbury Academic 
سال نشر: 2019 
تعداد صفحات: 681 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 4 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 71,000



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فهرست مطالب

Cover page\nHalftitle page\nSeries page\nTitle page\nCopyright page\nDedication\nContents\nList of Contributors\nPreface\nAcknowledgments\nIntroduction\nPart I Key Writings A. Key Texts\n1 Introduction to a Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right (1843–1844)\n	Notes\n	References\n2 The Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts of 1844 (1844)\n	Note\n	References\n3 “Theses on Feuerbach” (1845–1846)\n	References\n4 The German Ideology\n	References\n5 The Communist Manifesto (1848)\n	References\n6 The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte (1852)\n	I\n	II\n	III\n	References\n7 The Grundrisse (1858)\n	Notes\n	References\n8 A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (1859)\n	References\n9 Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Volume I (1867)\n	How Capital is Organized and One Way to Read it\n	Part VIII: So-Called Primitive Accumulation\n	Elaborating the Theory\n	Notes\n	Reference\n10 The Civil War in France (1871)\n	References\n11 “Critique of the Gotha Program” (1875)\n	References\nPart II Context B. Philosophical and Historical Context\n12 Materialism and the Natural Sciences\n	References\n	Bibliography\n13 The Christian State\n	On Definition\n	Holding Back the Tide?\n	Aufhebung of the Christian State\n	Notes\n	References\n14 Liberalism and its Discontents\n	The German Context\n	Political Liberalism\n	Economic Liberalism\n	Intellectual Critique\n	Journalism as Activism\n	Political Economy\n	The “Social Question”\n	Partnership with Engels\n	Radical Liberalism\n	After the Revolution\n	Marx is Back!\n	References\n15 Philosophical Constellations\n16 Nineteenth-Century Social Theory\n	Foundations: Positivism and Materialism\n	Methodology: Ethnographic and Sociological\n	Society as Object: The Rise of Social Evolutionism\n	Notes\n	References\n17 Industry, Technology, Energy\n	Industry\n	Technology\n	Energy\n	Notes\n	References\n18 Engels\n	Constructing Engels: From The Condition on the Working Class to The Dialectics of Nature\n	Engels’s Materialism: Some Notes on Scientific Socialism\n	Engels in the Twenty-First Century: A Green Engels?\n	Conclusion: An Engels for the Twenty-First Century\n	References\nC. Sources and Influences\n19 Ancient Philosophy\n	1. Marx and the Ancients\n	2. Philosophical Materialisms and the Problem of Freedom\n	3. Aristotle and Marx: Praxis and Critique\n	3. Aristotle and Marx on the Essence of the Human “Species” and the Possibility of Alienation\n	References\n20 Hegelianism\n	The Dialectic\n	Dialectical Hegelianism\n	Notes\n	References\n21 Political Economy1\n	Marx and Political Economy\n	Political Economy: Classical and Vulgar\n	Capitalism as a Historical Mode of Production\n	Civil Society . . .\n	. . . and its Volatile Expansionism\n	Value: The Unseen Regulator\n	Distribution\n	Biological Economy: The Real Dismal Science\n	Ricardo’s Antinomies\n	Conclusion\n	Note\n	References\n22 French Socialism and Communism\n	Notes\n	References\n23 Marx’s German and British Political Encounters\n	Introduction\n	1. First Encounter: “The Union of Thinking and Speaking”\n	2. Second Encounter: The Communist Party of 1848\n	3. Third Encounter: The International Workingmen’s Association\n	Conclusion\n	References:\nPart III Key Themes and Topics D. Key Themes and Topics\n24 Abstraction\n	Overview\n	Who is a Political Economist?\n	What is Political Economy?\n	Abstract and Concrete Labor\n	Abstraction in Critical Theory Today?\n	References\n25 Accumulation\n	The Logic of Accumulation\n	The History of Accumulation\n	Notes\n	References\n26 Alienation\n	Notes\n	References\n27 Base and Superstructure\n	Notes\n	References\n28 Capital\n	Introduction\n	1. How does Marx Introduce the Concept of Capital into Capital ?\n	2. How does Marx Explain the Creation of Surplus Value and Capital on the Basis of Equivalent Exchange?\n	3. How does Capital Come to Appear as “Fruit-Bearing”? Notes on the “Capital-Fetish”\n	Notes\n	References\n29 Circulation\n	Categories and Concepts for Analyzing Circulation\n	Circulation and the Critique of Ideology\n	Notes\n	References\n30 Crisis\n	Cyclical Crisis and Credit\n	Secular Crisis and Unemployment\n	Unity of Crisis\n	Notes\n	References\n31 Dialectics\n	References\n32 Exploitation\n	Introduction\n	Primary Exploitation\n	Secondary Exploitation\n	Debates\n	Development\n	Conclusion\n	Notes\n	References\n33 Fetishism\n	Notes\n	References\n34 History and Class Struggle\n	References\n35 Ideology\n	References\n36 Imperialism\n	References\n37 Mediation\n	References\n38 Mode of Production\n	References\n39 Nature and Ecology\n	Notes\n	References\n40 Primitive Accumulation\n	Acknowledgements\n	Notes\n	References\n41 Profit\n	Introduction\n	Why is Profit Controversial?\n	The Austro-Hungarian Revenge: The Retreat from Reality and the Assault on Marx\n	References\n42 Property\n	1. Conceptual Development\n	2. Historical Varieties of Property\n	Notes\n	References\n43 Religion\n	Marx’s Dialectical Understanding of Religion\n	Marx’s “Meta-critique” of Religion: From the Criticism of Heaven to the Criticism of Earth\n	Fetishism and “Religion of Everyday Life”\n	Updating and Fine-tuning Marx’s Critique of Religion\n	References\n44 Reproduction\n	Simple and Expanded Reproduction\n	Reproduction of the Capital–Labor Relation\n	The Marxist-Feminist Critique\n	Notes\n	References\n45 Revolutionary Communism\n	References\n46 Revolutionary Strategy\n	Notes\n	References\n47 Social Relations\n	References\n48 Utopia\n	Notes\n	References\n49 Value\n50 Work\n	References\nPart IV Reception and Influence E. Marx after Marx\n51 Soviet Union and Eastern Europe\n	References\n52 Latin America\n	Notes\n	References\n53 China\n	References\n54 Japan\n	I\n	II\n	III\n	Notes\n	References\n55 Western Europe\n	Notes\n	References\n56 The Arab World\n	Early Arab Marxism, or Arab Old Left Marxism: From the Early 1900s to the Late 1960s\n	Arab New Left Marxism: From the 1960s to the Present\n	The Recent Arab Revolts and the Future of Marxism in the Arab World\n	Notes\n	References\n57 India\n	Historical Antecedents to Marxism in India\n	Marxism and the Nationalist Movement (1913–1947)\n	Marxism in Post-Colonial India (1947–Present)\n	Indian Historiography and Philosophy\n	Subaltern Studies\n	Conclusion\n	References\n58 Africa\n59 North America\n	References\n60 Indigenous Internationalisms\n	Notes\n	References\nF. Contemporary Theory and Philosophy\n61 Literature and Culture\n	I\n	II\n	III\n	References\n62 Cultural Studies\n	Early British Cultural Studies: From the 1950s to the 1960s\n	Birmingham Cultural Studies: From the 1970s to the 1980s\n	Post-Modern Cultural Studies: From the 1980s to the 2000s\n	Emergent Cultural Studies: From the 2000s to the Present\n	Notes\n	References\n63 Ecology and Environmentalism\n	Notes\n	References\n64 Gender and Feminism\n	References\n65 Geography\n	References\n66 Materialisms\n	Mattering Mind vs. Minding Matter\n	Historical Materialism\n	New Materialism\n	Beyond Materialism as Critique\n	References\n67 Philosophy\n	References\n68 Political Economy\n	Characteristics\n	Characteristics of Marxian Political Economy\n	Contemporary Domains of Political Economic Research\n	References\n69 Political Theory\n	Political Marx or Marxian Critique of Politics?\n	The Three Sources and Three Component Parts Revisited\n	Politics and the Political\n	References\n70 Psychoanalysis\n	Note\n	References\n71 Racism\n	References\n72 Sociology\n	Notes\n	References\n73 Technology\n	References\n74 Uneven Development\n	References\nIndex




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