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Index
Foreword
Contents
1 The Globalized Law of Value
2 Capitalism and Ground Rent
2.1…Rent and the Ownership of the Soil: Going Back to Capital
2.2…From the Capitalist Mode of Production to Capitalist Formations: Class Alliances and the Creation of the World Capitalist System
2.3…The Development of Capitalism in Agriculture: The Theories of Kautsky, Lenin, and Chayanov
2.4…The Domination of Agriculture by the Capitalist Mode of Production
3 Modernity and Interpretations of Religions
3.1…The Flexibility of Religious Interpretations
3.2…Judaism, Christianity, Islam, One or Three Religious Metaphysics?
3.3…Religion and Society: The Risk of Theocracy
3.4…The Reformation, The Ambiguous Expression of Christianity’s Adaptation to Modernity
3.5…Political Islam
3.5.1 The European Renaissance and the Arab Nahda
3.5.2 Contemporary Political Islam
4 Re-reading the Post War Period
4.1…The Postwar Period, 1945--1992: An Overview
4.2…Establishing the Global Economic System: 1945--1955
4.3…The Bandung Era: 1955--1975
4.4…The Collapse of the Global System: 1975--1992
4.5…Establishing the Global Economic System: 1945--1955
5 Historical Capitalism: Accumulation by Dispossession
5.1…Capitalism: A Parenthesis in History
5.1.1 The Twentieth Century: The First Wave of Socialist Revolutions and the Awakening of the ‘South’
5.1.2 Bandung and the First Globalization of the Struggles (1955--1981)
5.2…The Long Decline of Capitalism and the Long Transition to World Socialism
5.2.1 The Counter-offensive of Capitalism in Decline
5.2.2 In Counterpoint: The Aims and Means of a Strategy of Constructing Convergence in Diversity
5.2.3 For a Socialist Renewal of the Twenty First Century: The Capitalism/Socialism Conflict and the North/South Conflict are Inseparable
5.3…The Plutocratic Oligarchies and the End of Bourgeois Civilisation
5.3.1 The Wheeler-dealers, The New Dominant Class in the Peripheries
5.3.2 Senile Capitalism and the End of Bourgeois Civilization
5.3.3 The Fragility of Capitalist Globalisation
5.3.4 Is Lucidity Possible in the Transformative Activities of Societies?
References
6 The Two Paths of Historical Development: The Contrast Between Europe and China
6.1…The General and the Particular in the Trajectories of Humanity’s Evolution
6.2…The Peasant Question at the Heart of the Opposition Between the European and Chinese Development Paths
6.3…Modern China Before Europe
6.4…The Great Pre-modern Regionalisations and the Centralisation of the Tributary Surplus
6.5…The Centralisation of Tributary Surplus
6.6…The Chinese Itinerary: A Long, Calm River?
6.7…Phonetic Writing, Conceptual Writing
6.8…China was Five Centuries Ahead of Europe
7 Russia in the World System: Geography or History?
References
8 China: The Emerging Nation
8.1…The Agrarian Question
8.2…Present and Future of Petty Production
8.3…Chinese State Capitalism
8.4…The Integration of China into Capitalist Globalization
8.5…China, Emerging Power
8.6…Great Successes, New Challenges
References
The Chinese Path and the Agrarian Question
Contemporary Globalization, the Imperialist Challenge
The Democratic Challenge
World Forum for Alternatives
About the Author
About the Book
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