An anthropology of Marxism
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
An anthropology of Marxism
(Race and representation / series editors, Abebe Zegeye, Julia Maxted and Robert Kriger)
Ashgate, c2001
Available at 13 libraries
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Description and Table of Contents
Description
In this study, the author argues that while Marx and Marxism became the principal owners of socialism in the 19th and 20th century, it was not their invention. The socialist ideal was, he suggests, embedded in Western civilization and its progenic cultures long before the opening of the modern era - and socialist thought did not begin with or depend on the existence of capitalism. The book proposes that the cultural, economic and social circumstances which spawned socialism are so diverse that the notion of socialism is best understood as a genetic phenomenon of resistance and should be treated in terms of "socialisms" rather than an enduring singular world-view. Focusing on the impact of social conflicts and political competitions, the book interrogates the social, cultural, institutional and historical materials from which socialisms emerged. In doing so, it exposes the conceptual boundaries and restraints, and the definitive discursives structures, imposed on and by Engels and Marx in the process of giving a "destiny" to scientific socialism.
Table of Contents
- Coming to terms with the Marxian taxonomy
- the social origins of materialism and socialism
- German critical philosophy and Marx
- the discourse on economics
- reality and its representation.
by "Nielsen BookData"