Marx and contemporary critical theory : the philosophy of real abstraction / Antonio Oliva, Ángel Oliva, Iván Novara, editors.

This edited volume brings together an international and interdisciplinary group of scholars to explore the traces of the idea of "Real Abstraction" in Marxs thought from the early to late writings, as well as the theoretical and practical consequences of this notion in the capitalist socia...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Oliva, Antonio (Editor), Oliva, Ángel (Editor), Novara, Iván (Editor)
Format: Ebook
Language:English
Published: Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, [2020]
Series:Marx, Engels, and Marxisms.
Subjects:
Online Access:Springer Humanities and Social Science eBook Collection 2020 English/International
Table of Contents:
  • 1. Introduction
  • Part I: Reconstructing the Problem of Real Abstraction
  • 2. Value Form and Abstract Labour in Marx: A Critical Review of Alfred Sohn-Rethel's Notion of 'Real Abstraction'
  • 3. Money as a Practical Abstraction: From Feuerbach to Marx Through Hess (1841-1844)
  • 4. Real Abstraction: Philological Issues
  • 5. Marx's Method and the Use of Abstraction
  • 6. Method and Value: Engels Through Sohn-Rothel
  • 7. Marx: The Method of Political Economy as an Ontological Critique
  • 8. Marx, Berkeley, and Bad Abstractions
  • 9. On Capital as Real Abstraction
  • 10. The Lost Roads and the Steep Paths of 'Real Abstraction'
  • 11. On Real Objects That Are Not Sensuous: Marx and abstraction in actu
  • 12. The Concept of Form in the Critique of Political Economy
  • 13. The Real Contradictions (Commodities as Coherence of Contradiction)
  • 14. Reification and Real Abstraction in Marx's Critique of Political Economy
  • 15. The Critique of Real Abstraction: From the Critical Theory of Society to the Critique of Political Economy and Back Again
  • 16. Real Abstraction in Light of the 'Practical Revolution in Epistemology' (Labriola). Considerations on the Uses and Limits of a Concept
  • 17. Real Abstraction in the History of the Natural Sciences
  • 18. Zapatista Autonomy: The Invention of Time as a Discontinuity and Untotaling Category.
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