Knowledge, class, and economics : Marxism without guarantees
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Knowledge, class, and economics : Marxism without guarantees
(Economics as social theory)
Routledge, 2018
- : hbk
- : pbk
Available at / 7 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Knowledge, Class, and Economics: Marxism without Guarantees surveys the "Amherst School" of non-determinist Marxist political economy, 40 years on: its core concepts, intellectual origins, diverse pathways, and enduring tensions. The volume's 30 original essays reflect the range of perspectives and projects that comprise the Amherst School-the interdisciplinary community of scholars that has enriched and extended, while never ceasing to interrogate and recast, the anti-economistic Marxism first formulated in the mid-1970s by Stephen Resnick, Richard Wolff, and their economics Ph.D. students at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst.
The title captures the defining ideas of the Amherst School: an open-system framework that presupposes the complexity and contingency of social-historical events and the parallel "overdetermination" of the relationship between subjects and objects of inquiry, along with a novel conception of class as a process of performing, appropriating, and distributing surplus labor. In a collection of 30 original essays, chapters confront readers with the core concepts of overdetermination and class in the context of economic theory, postcolonial theory, cultural studies, continental philosophy, economic geography, economic anthropology, psychoanalysis, and literary theory/studies.
Though Resnick and Wolff's writings serve as a focal point for this collection, their works are ultimately decentered-contested, historicized, reformulated. The topics explored will be of interest to proponents and critics of the post-structuralist/postmodern turn in Marxian theory and to students of economics as social theory across the disciplines (economics, geography, postcolonial studies, cultural studies, anthropology, sociology, political theory, philosophy, and literary studies, among others).
Table of Contents
List of Figures and Tables
List of Contributors
Introduction: Marxism without guarantees
Richard McIntyre, Theodore Burczak, and Robert Garnett
Contributors
Part I: Knowledge, class, and economics
Chapter One
A Conversation with Rick Wolff
Richard McIntyre
Part II: Economics without guarantees
Chapter Two
Strangers in a Strange Land: A Marxian Critique of Economics
David F. Ruccio
Chapter Three
Marxian Economics without Teleology: The Big New Life of Class
Bruce Norton
Chapter Four
Class-Analytic Marxism and the Recovery of the Marxian Theory of Enterprise
Erik Olsen
Chapter Five
Uncertainty and Overdetermination
Donald W. Katzner
Chapter Six
Catallactic Marxism: Marx, Hayek, and the Market
Ted Burczak
Part III: Labor, value, and class
Chapter Seven
Class and Overdetermination: Value Theory and the Core of Resnick and Wolff's Marxism
Bruce Roberts
Chapter Eight
Wolff and Resnick's Interpretation of Marx's Theory of Value and Surplus-Value: Where's the Money?
Fred Moseley
Chapter Nine
Rethinking Labor: Surplus, Class, and Justice
Faruk Eray Duzenli
Part IV: Heretical materialism
Chapter Ten
The Last Instance: Resnick and Wolff at the Point of Heresy
Warren Montag
Chapter Eleven
Aleatory Marxism: Resnick, Wolff, and the Revivification of Althusser
Joseph W. Childers
Chapter Twelve
Process: Tracing Connections and Consequences
Yahya M. Madra
Part V: Appraising the postmodern turn
Chapter Thirteen
Marxism's Double Task: Deconstructing and Reconstructing Postmodernism
Jan Rehmann
Chapter Fourteen
Overdetermination: The Ethical Moment
George DeMartino
Chapter Fifteen
The Cost of Anti-Essentialism
Paul Smith
Chapter Sixteen
Marxism and Postmodernism: Our Goal is to Learn from One Another
Richard D. Wolff
Part VI: Postcolonial Marx
Chapter Seventeen
Global Marx?
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak
Chapter Eighteen
Primitive Accumulation and Historical Inevitability: A Postcolonial Critique
Anjan Chakrabarti, Stephen Cullenberg, and Anup Dhar
Chapter Nineteen
Draining the "Blood Energy": Destruction of Independent Production and Creation of Migrant Workers in Post-Reform China
Joseph Medley and Lorrayne Carroll
Chapter Twenty
Problematizing the Global Economy: Financialization and the "Feudalization" of Capital
Rajesh Bhattacharya and Ian J. Seda-Irizarry
Chapter Twenty One
Reproduction of Noncapital: A Marxian Perspective on the Informal Economy in India
Snehashish Bhattacharya
Part VII: Capitalism and class analysis
Chapter Twenty Two
Management Ideologies and the Class Structure of Capitalist Enterprises: Shareholderism vs. Stakeholderism at Scott Paper Company
Michael Hillard and Richard McIntyre
Chapter Twenty Three
Lewis L. Lorwin's "Five-Year Plan for the World": A Subsumed Class Response to the Crises of the 1930s
Claude Misukiewicz
Part VIII: Communism without guarantees
Chapter Twenty Four
Bad Communisms
Maliha Safri and Kenan Ercel
Chapter Twenty Five
Hope without Guarantees: Overdeterminist Anti-Capitalism amidst Neoliberal Precarity
Ellen Russell
Part IX: Knowledge and class in everyday life
Chapter Twenty Six
The Work of Sex
Harriet Fraad
Chapter Twenty Seven
Homelessness as Violence: Bad People, Bad Policy, or Overdetermined Social Processes?
Vincent Lyon-Callo
Chapter Twenty Eight
Family Farms, Class, and the Future of Food
Elizabeth Ramey
Chapter Twenty Nine
A Long Shadow and Undiscovered Country: Notes on the Class Analysis of Education
Masato Aoki
Chapter Thirty
Ecological Challenges: A Marxist Response
Andriana Vlachou
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"