Difference between revisions of "Karl Marx"
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+ | The only time Marx uses the term 'negation of negation' in ''capital'', apropos of the 'expropriation of expropriators' in socialism, he has in mind precisely such a two-stag eprocess. THe (mythical) starting poitn is the state in which producers own their means of production; in the first stage, the process of expropriation tkaes place ''within the frame of the private ownership of the means of production'', which means that the expropriation of the majority amounts to the appropriation and concentration of the ownership of the means of production in a small class (of capitalists); in the second stage, these expropriations are themselves expropriated, since the veyr form of private ownership is abolished... What is of interest here is that, in Marx's eyes, ''capitalism itself, in its very notion'', is conceived as a point of passage between the two more 'stable' modes of production: capitalism lives off the incomplete realization of its own project (the same point was later made by Deleuze, who emphasized that capitalism poses a limit to the very forces of 'deterritorialization' it itself unleashes).<ref> The Ticklish Subject. p. 72-3</ref></blockquote> | ||
==Proletariat and Workign Class== | ==Proletariat and Workign Class== |
Revision as of 18:05, 14 May 2006
Marx
Contents
- 1 Ticklish Subject
- 1.1 Capital as Vampire
- 1.2 Class Struggles in France
- 1.3 Eighteenth Brumaire and the Creation of History
- 1.4 Equivalence
- 1.5 The Exception is the Rule
- 1.6 Explitation and Human Rights
- 1.7 Fascism as an Outcome of Capitalism
- 1.8 Fetishization
- 1.9 Ideological Abstraction
- 1.10 Living Contradiction of the Proletariat
- 1.11 Masculine Abstract Universality
- 1.12 Meta-Politics
- 1.13 Negation of Negation
- 1.14 Proletariat and Workign Class
- 1.15 Religious Narrative
- 1.16 And the Sociologists
- 1.17 From Theory to Revolution
- 1.18 Universalism
- 1.19 Workers as Commodity
Ticklish Subject
Capital as Vampire
358
Class Struggles in France
Dismissed by Russell== 142
Eighteenth Brumaire and the Creation of History
88
Equivalence
231
The Exception is the Rule
103
Explitation and Human Rights
179-82
Fascism as an Outcome of Capitalism
12
Fetishization
349
==Hegel as Essential Reading 149
Ideological Abstraction
276
Living Contradiction of the Proletariat
225
Masculine Abstract Universality
100
Meta-Politics
190, 191-2
Negation of Negation
The only time Marx uses the term 'negation of negation' in capital, apropos of the 'expropriation of expropriators' in socialism, he has in mind precisely such a two-stag eprocess. THe (mythical) starting poitn is the state in which producers own their means of production; in the first stage, the process of expropriation tkaes place within the frame of the private ownership of the means of production, which means that the expropriation of the majority amounts to the appropriation and concentration of the ownership of the means of production in a small class (of capitalists); in the second stage, these expropriations are themselves expropriated, since the veyr form of private ownership is abolished... What is of interest here is that, in Marx's eyes, capitalism itself, in its very notion, is conceived as a point of passage between the two more 'stable' modes of production: capitalism lives off the incomplete realization of its own project (the same point was later made by Deleuze, who emphasized that capitalism poses a limit to the very forces of 'deterritorialization' it itself unleashes).[1]
Proletariat and Workign Class
137
Religious Narrative
47
And the Sociologists
277-8
==Superseding the Market-- 339
From Theory to Revolution
174
Universalism
226
Workers as Commodity
157
- ↑ The Ticklish Subject. p. 72-3