Marx and nature : a red and green perspective
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Marx and nature : a red and green perspective
Haymarket Books, c2014
- : pbk
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Note
"Introduction to the Haymarket edition": p. [xv]-xxvii
Includes bibliographical references(p. [303]-314) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Though infrequently viewed as an environmental thinker, Karl Marx insisted that production as a social and material process is shaped and constrained by both historically developed relations among producers and natural conditions. Paul Burkett shows that it is Marx's overriding concern with human emancipation that impels him to approach nature from the standpoint of materialist history, sociology and critical political economy.
Table of Contents
Contents
Preface and Acknowledgements vii
Introduction 1
Part I Nature and Historical Materialism
1. Requirements of a Social Ecology 17
2. Nature, Labor, and Production 25
3. The Natural Basis of Labor Productivity and Surplus Labor 33
4. Labor and Labor Power as Natural and Social Forces 49
Part II Nature and Capitalism
5. Nature, Labor, and Capitalist Production 57
6. Capital’s “Free Appropriation” of Natural and
Social Conditions 69
7. Capitalism and Nature: A Value-Form Approach 79
8. Reconsidering Some Ecological Criticisms of
Marx’s Value Analysis 99
9. Capitalism and Environmental Crisis 107
10. Marx’s Working-Day Analysis and Environmental Crisis 133
Part III Nature and Communism
11. Nature and the Historical Progressivity of Capitalism 147
12. Nature and Capitalism’s Historical Limits 175
13. Capital, Nature, and Class Struggle 199
14. Nature and Associated Production 223
Notes 259
References 297
Index 309
by "Nielsen BookData"