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Marx After Marx
History and Time in the Expansion of Capitalism
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2015
About this book
Revisiting Marx’s seminal conception of capital and production to better critique our diverse global economies.
Author / Editor information
Harry Harootunian spent most of his career teaching history and East Asian studies at the University of Chicago, where he is Max Palevsky Professor of History Emeritus. He is now adjunct senior research scholar at the Weatherhead East Asian Institute, Columbia University, where he teaches a graduate course. He has published on various periods of Japan's intellectual and cultural history and on questions of Marxism and historical writing. He is also the author of History's Disquiet: Modernity, Cultural Practice, and the Question of Everyday Life and Overcome by Modernity: History, Culture, and Community in Interwar Japan.
Reviews
Hayden White, University of California, Santa Cruz:
Harry Harootunian is singularly qualified to give us a Marxism adequate to the conditions of a genuine 'world' (as against a Hegelian 'universalist') history in a global age. The Marx who emerges from this book is a nuanced, empirical, and genuinely historical thinker instead of the pseudo-scientific 'philosopher of history' met with in textbook accounts of Western Marxism.
Harry Harootunian is singularly qualified to give us a Marxism adequate to the conditions of a genuine 'world' (as against a Hegelian 'universalist') history in a global age. The Marx who emerges from this book is a nuanced, empirical, and genuinely historical thinker instead of the pseudo-scientific 'philosopher of history' met with in textbook accounts of Western Marxism.
Michael Dutton, author of Policing Chinese Politics: A History:
This is a landmark study within Marxist thought. Drawing largely on Marx's later works for its conceptual tools and theoretical method, Marx After Marx analyzes how different regions under differing circumstances cast a plurality of developmental forms all under the general code of capitalist accumulation.
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Frontmatter
i -
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CONTENTS
ix -
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Acknowledgments
xi -
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Introduction: Deprovincializing Marx
1 -
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1. Marx, Time, History
21 -
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2. Marxism’s Eastward Migration
73 -
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3. Opening to the Global South
115 -
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4. Theorizing Late Development and the “Persistence of Feudal Remnants”: Wang Yanan, Yamada Moritarō, and Uno Kōzō
153 -
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5. Colonial/Postcolonial 197
197 -
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Afterword: World History and the Everyday
235 -
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Notes
241 -
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Index
265
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
October 27, 2015
eBook ISBN:
9780231540131
Edition:
Pilot project. eBook available to selected US libraries only
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
312
eBook ISBN:
9780231540131
Audience(s) for this book
Professional and scholarly;