Marx for Today

Front Cover
Marcello Musto
Routledge, Sep 13, 2013 - Political Science - 256 pages

Since the onset of global crisis in recent years, academics and economic theorists from various political and cultural backgrounds have been drawn to Marx's analysis of the inherent instability of capitalism. The rediscovery of Marx is based on his continuing capacity to explain the present. In the context of what some commentators have described as a "Marx renaissance", the aim of this book is to make a close study of Marx's principal writings in relation to the major problems of our own society, and to show why and how some of his theories constitute a precious tool for the understanding and critique of the world in the early twenty-first century.

The book brings together varied reflections on the Marxian oeuvre, drawing on different perspectives and fields, and argues its case in two different parts. The first will encompass such diverse areas and themes as political thought, economics, nationalism, ethnicity, post-capitalist society, freedom, democracy, emancipation, and alienation, showing in each case how Marx has still today an invaluable contribution to make. The second presents a complete and rigorous account of the dissemination and the reception of Marx’s work throughout the world in the last decade. Both parts make a significant contribution to the current research on Marx and Marxisms.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Socialism and Democracy.

 

Contents

Notes on Contributors
Rereading Marx in 2010
The Myth of TwentiethCentury Socialism and the Continuing Relevance
Change the System Not Its Barriers
Emancipation in Marxs Early Work
Revisiting Marxs Concept of Alienation
Marx and the Politics of Sarcasm
In Capitalist Crisis Rediscovering Marx
Marxs Global Reception Today
Marx in Brazil
Marx in France
Marx in Germany
Marx in Italy
Marx in China
Marx in Japan
Index

Universal capitalism

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About the author (2013)

Marcello Musto teaches at the Department of Political Science of York University (Toronto, Canada) and is the editor of Karl Marx’s Grundrisse: Foundations of the Critique of Political Economy 150 Years Later (Routledge, 2008).

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