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Index
Cover-Page
Half-Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
Contributors
Introduction
Contemporary conflicts, challenges and developments
Structure of the book
1 What does it mean to be a Marxist?
Personal
Intellectual
Socio-political
Conclusion
Notes
References
2 An image in a curved mirror: Pareto’s critique of Marxist science
The critique of Marx
Conclusion
References
3 Slavoj Žižek’s theory of revolution: a critique
Introduction
Slavoj Žižek’s theory of revolution
Two sources for an anti-totalitarian critique
Conclusion: why we must keep saying totalitarianism
Notes
References
4 How to not read Žižek
Reading the romance
Blindness and insight
The reading of Žižek
Laughing at Žižek
The asymptotic sinthome of ideology
Notes
References
5 Marxism and development: a search for relevance
Introduction
Marx and modernity
Leninism and development
Dependent development
Marxism and imperialism
Post-development
References
6 Progress, anti-isms and revolutionary subjects: the importance of transcending liberalism
Introduction
The stagist conception of history
Technological progress as an evaluative device
Capitalism and consequentialism
Instrumentalist opposition to imperialism and the possibility of skipping stages
Dysfunctional strategies
Explaining alliances
Conclusion
Notes
References
7 Marx, morality and the global justice debate
Introduction
Marx’s anti-moralism as a tactical choice
Marx’s implicit eudaemonistic ethics
The capabilities approach
A constructive Marxist criticism
Notes
References
8 Can Marxism make sense of crime?
Introduction
The lumpenproletariat
Alienation
The criminal justice system and the reproduction conditions of capitalism
The Marxist analysis of law
Distributive justice and criminal justice
Communism and the end of crime?
Notes
References
9 Sinicized Marxist constitutionalism: its emergence, contents and implications
Introduction
Emerging context of SMC and its historical roots
The contents of SMC
Conclusion and implications
Notes
References
10 Varieties of constitutionalism: a response to ‘Sinicized Marxist Constitutionalism’ by Andrew (Chengyi) Peng
Note
References
11 Revolutionary subjectivity in post-Marxist thought: the case of Laclau and Badiou
Introduction
The centrality of productive labour
The objective tendency of capitalist production
The subjective tendency of capitalist development
The necessity of political power and the establishment of a classless society
Hegemony, populism and ‘the people’
Event, truth and the faithful subject
Conclusion
Notes
References
12 ‘Post’ or ‘Past’?: does post-Marxism have any future?
Introduction
Post-Marxism and postmodernism
Post-Marxism and post-Marxism
Radical democracy
Marxism and the crisis of modernity
Conclusion
References
Index
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