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Index
Cover
Half title
Title
Copyright
Table of Contents
Dedication
Foreword
1 The Necessity of Social Control
1.1 The Counter-Factual Conditionals of Apologetic Ideology
1.2 Capitalism and Ecological Destruction
1.3 The Crisis of Domination
1.4 From “Repressive Tolerance” to the Liberal Advocacy of Repression
1.5 War if the Normal Methods of Expansion Fail
1.6 The Emergence of Chronic Unemployment
1.7 The Intensification of the Rate of Exploitation
1.8 Capital’s “Correctives” and Socialist Control
2 Marxism Today
2.1 Sartre’s Alternative
2.2 Marxism Today
2.3 Mickey Mouse Socialism
2.4 The Problem of Organization
3 Causality, Time, and Forms of Mediation
3.1 Causality and Time under Capital’s Causa Sui
3.2 The Vicious Circle of Capital’s Second Order Mediations
4 The Activation of Capital’s Absolute Limits
5 The Meaning of Black Mondays (and Wednesdays)
6 The Potentially Deadliest Phase of Imperialism
7 The Challenge of Sustainable Development and the Culture of Substantive Equality
7.1 Farewell to “Liberty—Fraternity—Equality”
7.2 The Failure of “Modernization and Development”
7.3 Structural Domination and the Culture of Substantive Inequality
8 Another World Is Possible and Necessary
8.1 The Myth of Ideological Neutrality and the Imposition of the Single-Ideology State
8.2 The Emergence of Neoliberal Consensus
8.3 Capital’s Structural Crisis and the Implosion of the Soviet System
8.4 The Persistent Neglect of the National Question
8.5 Crisis in the Western Socialist Movement
8.6 Patriotism and Internationalism
8.7 The Immediate and the Long Term: Continuity and Change in Socialist Strategy
8.8 The Need to Redress Structural Inequality
8.9 The Necessary Global Alternative
8.10 The Social Subject of Emancipation and the Power of Emancipatory Ideology
9 Alternative to Parliamentarism
10 Reflections on the New International
11 Structural Crisis Needs Structural Change
12 The Mountain We Must Conquer: Reflections on the State
Introduction
12.1 The End of Liberal-Democratic Politics
12.2 The “Withering Away” of the State?
12.3 The Wishful Limitation of State Power
12.4 The Assertion of Might-as-Right
12.5 Eternalizing Assumptions of Liberal State Theory
12.6 Hegel’s Unintended Swan Song and the Nation-State
12.7 Capital’s Social Metabolic Order and the Failing State
Conclusion
Notes
Index
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