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Historical Materialism Volume 11, Number 1 Now Out!
by Sébastien Budgen
21 May 2003 17:14 UTC
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Historical Materialism: Research in Critical Marxist Theory

Announcing issue 11.1

***NEW ANNOUNCEMENT***

ALL SUBSCRIBERS TO HISTORICAL MATERIALISM CAN NOW HAVE ONLINE ACCESS TO ALL
BACKISSUES!

***REANNOUNCEMENT***

ALL SUBSCRIBERS ALSO ARE ENTITLED TO REDUCTIONS ON BOOKS IN THE HM BOOK
SERIES!


Volume 11 Issue 1


CONTENTS

Commentary


ALFREDO SAAD-FILHO
New Dawn or False Start in Brazil? The Political Economy of Lula¹s Election



Articles

MARIA TURCHETTO
    The Empire Strikes Back: On Hardt and Negri
GEORGE LIODAKIS
The Role of Biotechnology in the Agro-food System and the Socialist Horizon
PAUL PAOLUCCI
    The Scientific Method and the Dialectical Method
SEAN SAYERS
    Creative Activity and Alienation in Hegel and Marx

Interventions

MARTIN HART-LANDSBERG AND PAUL BURKETT
    Development, Crisis, and Class Struggle in East Asia: A Reply
DAN BOUSFIELD
Export-Led Development and Imperialism: A Response to Burkett and
Hart-Landsberg
JIM KINCAID
Underconsumption versus the Rate of Profit: a Reply to Burkett and
Hart-Landsberg
CHRISTOPHER J. ARTHUR
The Hegel-Marx Connection
TONY SMITH
    On the Homology Thesis
CHRISTOPHER J. ARTHUR
Once More on the Homology Thesis: A Response to Smith¹s Reply


Reviews

SCOTT MACWILLIAM
on Mohammed A. Bayeh¹s The Ends of Globalization; Terry Boswell¹s and
Christopher Chase-Dunn¹s The Spiral of Capitalism and Socialism; Raymond
Vernon¹s In the Hurricane¹s Eye: The Troubled Prospects of Multinational
Enterprises; and Robert Went¹s Globalization: Neoliberal Challenge, Radical
Responses.

IAN BIRCHALL
    on Philippe Riviale¹s L¹impatience du bonheur: apologie de Gracchus
Babeuf; Alain Maillard¹s La Communauté des égaux; and Jean Soublin¹s Je
t¹écris au sujet de Gracchus Babeuf.

PETE GLATTER
    on Elites after State Socialism: Theories and Analysis, edited by John
Higley and György Lengyel.


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'Historical Materialism provides exactly what is needed today: a Marxist
antidote to postmodern and similar fashions. It is one of the few journals
in English actually turned towards the future - one of the few journals in
which a progressive theorist can publish without secretly feeling ashamed!'
Slavoj Zizek

--


Historical Materialism seeks to reappropriate and refine the classical
Marxist tradition for emancipatory purposes. It promotes a genuine and open
dialogue between individuals working in different traditions of Marxism and
encourages an interdisciplinary, international debate between researchers
and academics. Historical Materialism sees itself as encouraging a new
generation of Marxist writers and researchers. Future issues will focus on
Africa, fantasy, the visual arts, Empire, anticapitalism, film, dialectics,
the American working class, modes of production, sexuality and postcolonial
fascism.


Now published by Brill Academic Publishers


EDITORS:
EMMA BIRCHAM
PAUL BLACKLEDGE
MARK BOULD
SEBASTIAN BUDGEN
MATTHEW CAYGILL
ALEJANDRO COLÁS
ANGELA DIMITRAKAKI
JIM KINCAID
ESTHER LESLIE
MARTIN MCIVOR
CHINA MIÉVILLE
PAUL REYNOLDS
GUIDO STAROSTA
GIUSEPPE TASSONE
PARIS YEROS
CONTACT: HM@LSE.AC.UK


ADVISORY BOARD:
AIJAZ AHMAD (New Delhi), HAMZA ALAVI (Karachi), GREG ALBO (Toronto), ROBERT
ALBRITTON (Toronto), ELMAR ALTVATER (Berlin), GIOVANNI ARRIGHI (Baltimore),
CHRIS ARTHUR (Brighton), JAIRUS BANAJI (Bombay), COLIN BARKER (Manchester),
DANIEL BENSAÏD (Paris), HENRY BERNSTEIN (London), PATRICK BOND
(Johannesburg), WERNER BONEFELD (York), ROBERT BRENNER (Los Angeles), SIMON
BROMLEY (Open University), MICHAEL BURAWOY (Berkeley), PAUL BURKETT (Terre
Haute), PETER BURNHAM (Warwick), TERRY BYRES (London), ALEX CALLINICOS
(York), GUGLIELMO CARCHEDI (Amsterdam), ALAN CARLING (Bradford), VIVEK
CHIBBER (New York), ANDREW CHITTY (Sussex),SIMON CLARKE (Warwick), DAVID
COATES (Reynolda Station), ANDREW COLLIER (Southampton), GEORGE COMNINEL
(Toronto), MIKE DAVIS (San Diego), RICHARD B. DAY (Toronto), MICHAEL DENNING
(Yale), FRANK DEPPE (Marburg), GÉRARD DUMÉNIL (Paris), TERRY EAGLETON
(Manchester), GREGORY ELLIOTT (Paris), BEN FINE (London), ROBERT FINE
(Warwick), JOHN BELLAMY FOSTER (Eugene), CARL FREEDMAN (Louisiana), ALAN
FREEMAN (London), NORMAN GERAS (Manchester), MARTHA GIMENEZ (Boulder),
MAURICE GODELIER (Paris), PETER GOWAN (London), IRFAN HABIB (Aligarh), JOHN
HALDON (Birmingham), DAVID HARVEY (New York), WOLFGANG-FRITZ HAUG (Berlin),
COLIN HAY (Birmingham), MICHAEL HEINRICH (Berlin), JOHN HOLLOWAY (Mexico
City), FREDRIC JAMESON (Duke), BOB JESSOP (Lancaster), GEOFFREY KAY
(London), JOHN KELLY (London), RAY KIELY (London), STATHIS KOUVELAKIS
(Paris), MARK LAFFEY (London), DAVID LAIBMAN (New York), COSTAS LAPAVITSAS
(London), NEIL LARSEN (Davis), NEIL LAZARUS (Warwick), MICHAEL LEBOWITZ
(Vancouver), ANDREW LEVINE (Madison), DOMINIQUE LÉVY (Paris), MARCEL VAN DER
LINDEN (Amsterdam), PETER LINEBAUGH (Toledo), DOMENICO LOSURDO (Urbino),
MICHAEL LÖWY (Paris), JOE MCCARNEY (Brighton), JOHN MCILROY (Liverpool),
DAVID MCNALLY (Toronto), SCOTT MEIKLE (Glasgow), PETER MEIKSINS (Cleveland),
ISTVÁN MÉSZÁROS (Brighton), WARREN MONTAG (Los Angeles), KIM MOODY (New
York), FRED MOSELEY (Mount Holyoke), FRANCIS MULHERN (Middlesex), PATRICK
MURRAY (Omaha), BERTELL OLLMAN (New York), JOHN O¹NEILL (Lancaster),WILLIAM
PIETZ (Los Angeles), KEES VAN DER PIJL (Sussex), CHARLES POST (New York),
MOISHE POSTONE (Chicago), HELMUT REICHELT (Bremen), GEERT REUTEN(Amsterdam),
JOHN ROBERTS (London), JUSTIN ROSENBERG (Sussex), MARK RUPERT (Syracuse),
ALFREDO SAAD-FILHO (London), SUMITSARKAR (Delhi), SEAN SAYERS (Kent), THOMAS
SEKINE (Tokyo), ANWAR SHAIKH (New York), JENS SIEGELBERG (Hamburg),
HAZELSMITH (Warwick), NEIL SMITH (New York), TONY SMITH (Iowa), HILLEL
TICKTIN (Glasgow), ANDRÉ TOSEL (Nice), ENZO TRAVERSO (Paris), LISE VOGEL
(Lawrenceville), ALAN WALD (Ann Arbor), RICHARD WALKER (Berkeley), JOHN
WEEKS (London), CHRIS WICKHAM (Birmingham), MICHAEL WILLIAMS (Milton
Keynes), ELLEN MEIKSINS WOOD (London), ERIK OLIN WRIGHT (Madison)


Details
o Volume 10 (2002, 4 issues per year)
o ISSN 1465-4466
o List price Institutions EUR 149.- / US$ 173.-
o List price Individuals EUR 36.50 / US$ 42.-
o Price includes online subscription

Why Historical Materialism now?
It is fourteen years since the implosion of Œhistorical communism¹ and the
triumphal proclamation of capitalism as the natural terminus of world
history. As neo-liberal strategies continue their work of global
accumulation and exploitation, the invincibility of the world market has
been assumed by all sides of the political spectrum. But while this new
global order is thus marked by an unprecedented unity of appearance, in
reality sharp differences and deepening inequalities persist, both between
states and within societies. For the world today is increasingly driven by
the political, economic and social contradictions which capitalist
development brings in its wake. To those on the margins of the world
economy, the effects of being left out are devastating: poverty, starvation
and civil war are widespread. Meanwhile in the advanced countries, the
pursuit of global competition for investment and the related internal
restructuring of the state have discredited even moderate Keynesian policies
and social reformism. Thus, despite the production of ever greater surplus
wealth, the numbers of those in poverty keep growing; and the vast majority
remain excluded from any meaningful power. And yet against this backdrop,
capitalism itself has been absolved of responsibility, and there has been a
retreat from any fundamental critique. One of the most effective arguments
in the hands of political and economic elates in enforcing domestically
unpopular policies is that international, Œglobalising¹ capitalism has
become our Œfate¹ in a qualitatively new sense. It is this disabling eclipse
of social imagination, manifested in the almost universal assumption of a
continuing capitalist future that Historical Materialism seeks to counter.

Theoretical orientation Motivated by a vision of society free of
exploitation and domination, the journal sets out from the conviction that
classical Marxism provides the richest framework for analysing the making
and unmaking of social phenomena. Its aim is to build upon that tradition,
drawing on and debating the diverse contributions of its various strands. We
believe that the explanatory power of classical Marxism derives above all
from two key elements. The first of these elements is the epistemology of
the Theses on Feuerbach, especially its unity of theory and practice. Marx
famously said that Œphilosophers have only interpreted the world, the point
is to change it¹. In other words, the most incisive interpretations of the
world are those which are harnessed to practical efforts to transform it.
The second key element is Marxism¹s recognition of the centrality of class
relations and social struggle which result from historically specific modes
of surplus appropriation and domination. The key to understanding history
lies in relating the systemic forces inherent in capitalist and other class
societies, with the experiences of their agents. From this dialectical
antagonism of subject and object arises historical change. Aware of the
deformations and instrumentalisations of Marxism, we believe that Marx¹s
dictum in the Eighteenth Brumaire that Œthe tradition of all the dead
generations weighs like a nightmare on the brains of the living¹ must be
critically applied to Marxism itself as an intellectual and political
tradition. Far from being a theoretical monolith, Marxism is necessarily an
object of continuing debate, a debate fuelled by the ever-changing
subjective experiences of people in differing social contexts, and
contingent on the objective logic of production and reproduction as embedded
in specific social relations. We propose that the regeneration of classical
Marxism requires the recovery of human agency, understood both in its
objectified existence which reproduces dominant social relations, and in its
disruptive, and potentially emancipator forms.

Working principles 
The journal maintains two fundamental working principles:

Interdisciplinarity When the study of natural and social life is fragmented
into discrete disciplines, the potential for comprehending the shape of the
whole is weakened. This modern division of intellectual labour arose with
the emergence of capitalism and its concomitant differentiation of society.
Society is not, however, composed of different spheres of action, separately
pursuing their own self-reproductive logics. Rather, one relation dominates
and takes an exploitative form in class societies - that Œtwofold relation¹
through which people organise their collective interaction with the natural
world in order to transform it according to their needs: the relation of
production. The historically specific forms of this relation affect all
dimensions of social life, which have in the modern period become
differentiated in new ways. The task must be to take self-reflexive account
of these historical differentiations without naturalising and reifying their
separation and content. It is therefore necessary to continue the critique
of ideology and oppose the compartmentalisation of knowledge. Historical
Materialism will encourage the systematic integration and
cross-fertilisation of various fields of knowledge in concrete analyses.

Marxist pluralism Historical Materialism will seek to create a forum for
debate between those working in different Marxist traditions. The journal
will also engage with non-Marxist contributions which constructively
criticise Marxist theorems and attempt alternative explanations of social
phenomena. The journal is not aligned with any particular tendency or party
and aims to ensure that political differences are neither simply repressed
nor asserted a priori, but can emerge as a result of substantive theoretical
enquiry. 

ŒThe birth of Historical Materialism was a major event not only because it
provides a unique forum for non-sectarian Marxist debate but also because it
represents a change in the wind a really promising sign of socialist
renewal.¹
‹ Ellen Meiksins Wood

ŒHistorical Materialism provides exactly what is needed today: a Marxist
antidote to postmodern and similar fashions. It is one of the few journals
in English actually turned towards the future ‹ one of the few journals in
which a progressive theorist can publish without secretly feeling ashamed!¹
‹ Slavoj Zizek

ŒHistorical Materialism is already among the most highly regarded journals
in Marxian theory published in any language. In an age of increasing
specialization it is committed to high quality articles from across a broad
range of disciplines. If a resurgence of Marxian thinking occurs in the
twenty-first century Historical Materialism will deserve a good part of the
credit.¹
‹ Tony Smith


Research agenda 
The journal encourages research into four broad and, we stress,
non-exclusive areas. Firstly, at the very heart of the Marxist tradition is
the theorisation of history, class struggle and revolution. Within the wider
ambit of the Marxist theory of social change, we invite contributions of a
historical and theoretical nature which investigate the nexus between class
conflict, and social and political movements. Furthermore we encourage
studies which address Marxist conceptualisations of revolution. Secondly,
the development of historical materialism involves an attempt to fathom and
revitalise the elements which remain fundamental in the Marxist tradition.
We therefore welcome studies which survey recent attempts to re-appropriate
and redefine Marxism for contemporary social science. Areas which could be
covered within this context include: the clarification of core concepts and
theorems such as work on variations in Marxist method and epistemology, as
well as studies on the history and historiography of Marxism itself. The
third area of study is provided by the uneven and contradictory
universalisation of capitalism, and its international political economy.
Here we envisage debate on the geographical expansion of capitalism, its
incorporation of other social structures, and the politics of resistance to
these processes. We invite work on the historical relationship between the
state and the economy, and that between fragmented political authority and
the world market. The complexity of the historical genesis of capitalist
modernity requires that the arguably neglected themes of war/geopolitics,
diplomacy, trade, migration, strategies of exploitation, conjunctures of
crisis, questions of globalisation, and the latest round of neoliberal
orthodoxy must be within the scope of Marxist scholarship. Furthermore, we
welcome single country or area studies which combine the explanation of
conjunctural contexts within the perspective of long-term economic, social
and political developments. In the fourth area we aim to confront the
challenges of post-Marxist critique, the claim that the allegedly totalising
and class-reductionist premises of Marxism hinder comprehension of important
questions concerning gender, racism, ecology, culture and aesthetics. We
recognise the need for constructive engagement with these issues and
encourage studies into their historical constitution, and their relation to
the reproduction of capitalist society as a whole. Space will also be
provided for the critical exploration and development of the classical
themes of ideology and consciousness in which discussion of the above issues
were prefigured.

Editorial policy 
Historical Materialism aims to be neither a traditional academic journal
locked into the career structure of a particular discipline, nor a platform
for the exhibition of a particular Œline¹ on the intellectual Left by the
already established. We welcome submission of work by graduate students and
younger researchers. The journal also intends to maintain a broad
international awareness and will actively encourage contributions from a
non-anglophone public. These could take the form of introducing
country-specific Marxist debates and issues to a primarily English-speaking
readership, or the presentation or discussion of major new or as yet
untranslated publications. Operating from these principles, the journal
hopes to display the ongoing power and commitment of historical materialism
- both as a method of analysis capable of providing explanation adequate to
the world we inhabit, and as an inspiration to human potential and practical
action.


ŒHistorical Materialism demonstrates that Marxist analysis is not merely
alive, but thriving again as the contradictions of globalisation generate
economic, social and cultural tensions which mainstream analysis cannot
account for.¹
‹ John Weeks

ŒHistorical Materialism is an excellent journal providing a unique forum for
serious intellectual work about every aspect of Marxism. The quality of the
first issues surpassed expectations. The journal is essential reading for
anyone with an interest in this field.¹
‹ Sean Sayers


Back issues

Volume No.1, Winter 1997: Ellen Meiksins Wood on the non-history of
capitalism o Colin Barker on Ellen Wood o Esther Leslie on Benjamin¹s
Arcades Project o John Weeks on underdevelopment o Tony Smith on theories of
technology o Michael Lebowitz on the silences of capital o John Holloway on
alienation o Peter Burnham on globalisation and the state o Fred Moseley on
the US rate of profit, plus reviews by Peter Linebaugh, Matthew Beaumont and
Benno Teschke

Volume No. 2, Summer 1998: China Miéville on architecture o Gregory Elliott
on Perry Anderson o Andrew Chitty on recognition o Michael Neary & Graham
Taylor on alchemy o Paul Burkett on neo-Malthusian Marxism o Slavoj Zizek on
risk society, plus reviews by Ben Watson, Mike Haynes, Esther Leslie, Elmar
Altvater, Martin Jenkins, Geoffrey Kay and Henning Teschke

Volume No. 3, Winter 1998: Symposium on Leninism and Political Organisation:
Simon Clarke o Howard Chodos &Colin Hay o John Molyneux o John Ehrenberg o
Alan Shandro o Jonathan Joseph o Peter Hudis o Plus Paul Burkett on Ted
Benton o Werner Bonefeld on novelty o John Robertson head-wounds, plus
reviews by Michael A. Lebowitz, Adrian Budd, Giles Peaker, Gareth Dale,
Kenneth J. Hammond and Christopher Bertram

Volume No. 4, Summer 1999: Symposium on Robert Brenner and the World Crisis,
Part 1 Alex Callinicos o Guglielmo Carchedi o Simon Clarke o Gérard Duménil
and Dominique Lévy o Chris Harman o David Laibman o Michael A. Lebowitz o
Fred Moseley o Murray Smith o Ellen Meiksins Wood o Plus Alan Johnson on Hal
Draper o Hal Draper on Lenin o Tony Smith on John Rosenthal, plus reviews by
Mathew Worley, Edwin Roberts, Charles Post, Alan Wald, Rick Kuhn and Emma
Bircham

Volume No. 5, Winter 1999: Symposium on Robert Brenner and the World Crisis,
Part 2 Werner Bonefeld o Alan Freeman o Michael Husson o Anwar Shaikh o Tony
Smith o Richard Walker o John Weeks o Plus Craig Brandist on ethics,
politics and dialogism o Geoff Kay on abstract labour and capital o plus
reviews by Sean Sayers, Jon Gubbay, Gregor Gall, Alan Johnson, Greg Dawes
and Adrian Haddock

Volume No. 6, Summer 2000: Alan Shandro on Marx as a conservative thinker o
Patrick Murray on abstract labour o Deborah Cook on Adorno and Habermas o
Andrew Kliman on intrinsic value o Felton Shortall vs. Michael Lebowitz on
the limits of capital o Ben Fine, Costas Lapavitsas & Dimitris Milonakis vs.
Tony Smith on Brenner o plus reviews by Michael Cowen, Alan Carling & Paul
Nolan, Jonathan Joseph and Ian Birchall

Volume No. 7, Winter 2000: Tony Burns on ancient Greek materialism o Chik
Collins on Vygotsky and Voloshinov o Paul Wetherly on Giddens o Patrick
Murray on abstract labour, part II o Geert Reuten on Patrick Murray o John
Kelly vs. Gregor Gall on class mobilisation o An interview with Slavoj Zizek
o plus reviews by Noel Castree, Paul Blackledge, Paul Jaskot, John Roberts,
Andrew Hemingway and Larry Wilde

Volume No. 8, Summer 2001: Focus on East Asia: Paul Burkett & Martin
Hart-Landsberg on East Asia since the financial crisis o Michael Burke on
the changing nature of capitalism o Giles Ungpakorn on Thailand o Vedi Hadiz
on Indonesia o Dae-oup Chang on South Korea o Raymond Lau on China o Jim
Kincaid on Marxist explanations of the Crisis o Dic Lo on China o Joseph T.
Miller in Peng Shuzhi o Paul Zarembka & Sean Sayers debate Marx and
Romanticism o Ted Benton & Paul Burkett debate Marx and ecology o Reviews by
Walden Bello, Warren Montag, Alex Callinicos, Paul Burkett, Brett Clark and
John Bellamy

Volume No. 9, Winter 2001: Peter Gowan, Leo Panitch & Martin Shaw on the
state and globalisation: a roundtable discussion o Andrew Smith on occult
capitalism o Susanne Soederberg on capital accumulation in Mexico o David
Laibman on the contours of the maturing socialistic economy o John Rosenthal
on Hegel Decoder: A Reply to Smith¹s ŒReply¹ o Jonathan Hughes on Analytical
Marxism and Ecology: A Reply to Paul Burkett o Reviews by Alex Callinicos,
Warren Montag, Kevin Anderson and Tony Smith

Volume 10, Number 1:  Articles o Ellen Meiksins Wood on Infinite War o Peter
Green on ŒThe Passage from Imperialism to Empire¹: A Commentary on Empire by
Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri o John Holloway on Going in the Wrong
Direction: Or, Mephistopheles ­ Not Saint Francis of Assisi o Ray Kiely on
Actually Existing Globalisation, De-Globalisation, and the Political Economy
of Anticapitalist Protest o Enzo Traverso on Bohemia, Exile and Revolution o
Interventions o Patrick Murray¹s Reply to Geert Reuten o Paul Burkett on
Analytical Marxism and Ecology: A Rejoinder o Reviews o Erik Olin Wright and
Harry Brighouse on  Alex Callinicos¹s Equality o Paresh Chattopadhyay on
Bertell Ollman¹s Market Socialism: The Debate among Socialists and Michael
Howard¹s Self-Management and the Crisis of Socialism o Chris Arthur on
Robert Albritton¹s Dialectics and Deconstruction in Political Economy o John
Foster on Neil Davidson¹s The Origins of Scottish Nationhood o Alex Law on
William Kenefick and Arthur McIvor¹s Roots of Red Clydeside 1910-1914? o
Thomas M. Jeannot on John O¹Neill¹s The Market: Ethics, Knowledge, and
Politics o Richard Saull on Fred Halliday¹s Revolution and World Politics:
The Rise and Fall of the Sixth Great Power

Volume 10, Number 2 o Commentary o Paris Yeros on Zimbabwe and the Dilemmas
of the Left o Articles o Sam Gindin and Leo Panitch on Gems and Baubles in
Empire o Marcus Taylor on Success for Whom? An Historical-Materialist
Critique of Neoliberalism in Chile o Sean Creaven on The Pulse of Freedom?
Bhaskar¹s Dialectic and Marxism o Paul Nolan Levine and Sober on Natural
Selection and Historical Materialism o Interventions o Jason C. Myers on
Ideology After the Welfare State o Tony Smith on Hegel: Mystic Dunce or
Important Predecessor? A Reply to John Rosenthal o Robert Albritton on A
Response to Chris Arthur o Film Review o Mike Wayne on A Violent Peace:
Robert Guédiguian¹s La Ville est tranquille o Reviews o Milton Fisk on
Markar Melkonian¹s Richard Rorty¹s Politics: Liberalism at the End of the
American Century o Ian Birchall on Jean-Pierre Le Goff¹s Mai 68, l¹héritage
impossible and Gérard Filoche¹s 68-98, Histoire sans fin o Dave Beech on
Arthur C. Danto¹s The Wake of Art: Criticism, Philosophy, and the End of
Taste o Gregor Gall on Peter Waterman¹s New Internationalisms and Labour
Worldwide in an Era of Globalization: Alternative Union Models in the New
World Order, edited by Ronaldo Munck and Peter Waterman


Volume 10, Number 3 o Articles o Giovanni Arrighi on Lineages of Empire o
Ellen Wood on Landlords and Peasants, Masters and Slaves: Class Relations in
Greek and Roman Antiquity o Peter Thomas on Philosophical Strategies:
Althusser and Spinoza o Archive o Richard B. Day on Pavel V. Maksakovsky:
The Marxist Theory of the Cycle o Pavel V. Maksakovsky on The General Theory
of the Cycle o Intervention o Neil Davidson on Stalinism, ŒNation Theory¹
and Scottish History: A Reply to John Foster o Reviews o Ian Buchanan on
Perry Anderson¹s The Origins of Postmodernity, Clint Burnham¹s The
Jamesonian Unconscious, Steven Helmling¹s The Success and Failure of Fredric
Jameson, Sean Homer¹s Fredric Jameson, Adam Roberts¹s Fredric Jameson, and
Christopher Wise¹s The Marxian Hermeneutics of Fredric Jameson o Simon
Bromley on Gregory Elliott¹s Perry Anderson: The Merciless Laboratory of
History o Ian H. Birchall on Bernard-Henri Lévy¹s Le Siècle de Sartre

Volume 10, Number 4 o A special symposium: MARXISM AND FANTASY o Articles o
Mark Bould on the Dreadful Credibility of Absurd Things: A Tendency in
Fantasy Theory o Stuart Elden on Through the Eyes of the Fantastic:
Lefebvre, Rabelais and Intellectual History o Ishay Landa on Slaves of the
Ring: Tolkien's Political Unconscious o Mike Wayne on Utopianism and Film o
Anna Kornbluh on For the Love of Money o Alex Law and Jan Law on Magical
Urbanism: Walter Benjamin and Utopian Realism in the Film Ratcatcher o Ben
Watson on Fantasy and Judgement: Adorno, Tolkien, Burroughs o Archive o
Ernest Mandel - Anticipation and Hope as Categories of Historical
Materialism o Interventions o Carl Freedman on A Note on Marxism and Fantasy
o Fredric Jameson on Radical Fantasy o Steve Shaviro on Capitalist Monsters
o Reviews o Neil Maycroft on Patrick Hamilton's Impromptu in Moribundia o
Mark Bould on Carl Freedman's Critical Theory and Science Fiction o Andrew
M. Butler on Rob Latham's Consuming Youth: Vampires, Cyborgs, and the
Culture of Consumption o Non-symposium items o Article o Ana Dinerstein on
The Battle of Buenos Aires: Crisis, Insurrection and the Reinvention of
Politics in Argentina o Reviews o Tony Smith on Werner Bonefeld and Kosmas
Psychopedis (eds.), The Politics of Change: Globalisation, Ideology and
Critique o Mike Haynes on Marxism and the Russian Question in the Wake of
the Soviet Collapse

 
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