Marx's critique of politics, 1842-1847 /
The author traces Marx's intellectual development through a careful analysis of the texts. He demonstrates an unmistakable continuity throughout the period, arguing that Marx consciously worked out his critique of politics from a well-defined starting point to a logical conclusion.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Toronto ; Buffalo :
University of Toronto Press,
©1984.
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Colección: | Heritage.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; PREFACE; INTRODUCTION: Marx's starting point: Epicurus and the ontology of mind; Idealist or materialist; Critique and its development; 1 The State as Rational and Real: articles from the Rheinische Zeitung, 1842-43; The first use of critique; Right and privilege; Law and laws; Press freedom and censorship; The state and the Christian state; The political state and the estates; The political state and representation; The contradiction and its resolution; Conclusions; 2 State and Civil Society, or the Question of Sovereignty: the 1843 critique of Hegel; Sovereignty: the one or the many?
- Bureaucracy: universality as mere formLegislatures: unity or mediated conflict?; The upper house; The lower house; True democracy: the solved riddle; Conclusions; 3 Political and Social Emancipation: articles from the Deutsch-Französische Jahrbücher, 1843-44; Consciousness of freedom and its realization: the letters; The meaning of political emancipation and the prerequisite of social emancipation: 'On the Jewish Question'; The means to social emancipation: the introduction to the Critique of Hegel; The political point of view and the meaning of industrial strife: 'Critical Marginal Notes'
- Conclusions4 Private Property and Communism: the Paris manuscripts and 'Comments on James Mill, ' 1844; The first manuscript: wages, profit, rent, and alienated labour; The second manuscript: the antithesis of capital and labour; The third manuscript: the transcendence of self-estrangement; Conclusions; 5 The Critique of Politics: writings from 1845 to 1847; The French Revolution or the history of the origin of the modern state; The rights of man; The representative state: the constitutional and the democratic; Law; Taxes; The state and civil society; Social transformation and communism
- Conclusions6 Conclusions; The development of the critique of politics; The preconditions of Marx's critique; Marx and the end of modern political theory; APPENDIX: Alienated Labour, Division of Labour, and Private Property; NOTES; GLOSSARY OF CONCEPTS; SELECTED AND ANNOTATED BIBLIOGRAPHY; INDEX