Post-Marxism
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Post-Marxism is a trend in philosophy and social theory based on Karl Marx's writings and Marxism proper, and bypassing orthodox Marxism. Philosophically, post-Marxism counters derivationism and essentialism (for example, it does not see the State as an instrument that ‘functions’ unambiguously and autonomously on behalf of the interests of a given class).[1] Recent overviews of post-Marxism are provided by Ernesto Screpanti,[2] Göran Therborn,[3] and Gregory Meyerson.[4]
History
Post-Marxism dates from the late 1960s; several trends and events of that period influenced its development. The weakness of the Russian Communist Soviet paradigm became evident beyond Russia. This happened concurrently with the occurrence internationally of the student riots of 1968, the rise of Maoist theory, and the proliferation of commercial television, which covered in its broadcasts the Vietnam War.
Semiology and discourse
When Roland Barthes began his sustained critique of mass culture via semiology — the science of signs — and the book Mythologies, some Marxist philosophers based their social criticism upon linguistics, semiotics, and discourse. Basing his approach on Barthes' work, Baudrillard wrote For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign (1972), criticizing contemporary Marxism for ignoring the sign value of its philosophic discourse.
Important post-Marxists
- Giorgio Agamben
- Bruno Latour
- Robert Kurz
- Michael Albert
- Alain Badiou
- Étienne Balibar
- Jason Barker
- Jean Baudrillard
- Zygmunt Bauman
- Cornelius Castoriadis
- Krisis
- Ágnes Heller
- Paul Hirst
- Barry Hindess
- John Holloway
- Fredric Jameson
- Abdullah Öcalan
- Boris Yuliyevich Kagarlitsky
- Ernesto Laclau
- Claude Lefort
- Jean-François Lyotard
- Chantal Mouffe
- Jean-Luc Nancy
- Jacques Rancière
- Ernesto Screpanti
- Gayatri Spivak
- Alexander Tarasov
- Göran Therborn
- Alain Touraine
- Alberto Toscano
- Slavoj Žižek
- Catharine MacKinnon
- Pierre Bourdieu
See also
- Arena (first series)
- Autonomism
- Budapest School (Lukács)
- Frankfurt School
- Marxism and Marxist philosophy
- Neo-Marxism
- Neo-Marxian economics
- New Left Review
- Open Marxism
- Poststructuralism
- Rethinking Marxism
- Specters of Marx
Notes
- ↑ Iain Mclean & Alistair Mcmillan, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Politics (Article: State), Oxford University Press, 2003
- ↑ "The Postmodern Crisis in Economics and the Revolution against Modernism", “Rethinking Marxism”, 2000
- ↑ From Marxism to Post-Marxism. London: Verso, 2008, 208pp.
- ↑ Meyerson, G. (2009). Post-Marxism as Compromise Formation. Retrieved from: http://clogic.eserver.org/2009/Meyerson.pdf
References
- Imanol Galfarsoro: "(Post)Marxismoa, kultura eta eragiletasuna: Ibilbide historiko labur bat" in Alaitz Aizpuru(koord.), Euskal Herriko pentsamenduaren gida, Bilbo, UEU 2012. ISBN 978-84-8438-435-9
- Simon Tormey & Jules Townshend, Key Thinkers from Critical Theory to Post-Marxism, Pine Forge Press, 2006.
- Sim, Stuart. Post-Marxism: An Intellectual History, Routledge, 2002.
- Shenfield, Stephen. Vladislav Bugera: Portrait of a Post-Marxist Thinker
- el-Ojeili, Chamsy. Post-Marxism with Substance: Castoriadis and the Autonomy Project, in New Political Science, 32:2, June 2001, pp. 225–239.
- el-Ojeili C. After post-socialism: Social theory, utopia and the work of castoriadis in a global age, Antepodium: Online Journal of World Affairs (2011), pp. 1–16.
External links
- Robert Kurz: Postmarxismus und Arbeitsfetisch: Krisis Nr. 17, 1995 (German)
- Oliver Marchart, Beantwortung der Frage: Was heißt Post-Marxismus?, Eintrag für Vladimir Malachov, Vadim Filatov: Sovremennaja zapadnaja filosofia, Moscow 1998 (German)