"Marx’s writings have inspired an extraordinary corpus of writing designed to understand and change capitalism. However, while many have tried to wear his boots, few have journeyed in genuinely new directions while holding Marx’s compass. Henderson here finds contemporary value in Marx’s writings in ways both faithful and surprising." -Noel Castree, Manchester University<br /> "<i>Value in Marx</i> offers a truly original reading-itself a rare thing-backed by virtuosic textual analysis of Marx and a near-impeccable awareness of the wider literature. One cannot ask for much more." -David B. Clarke, Swansea University<br />


Long prone to dogmatic disagreement, the question of value in Marx’s thought-what value is, the purpose it serves, its application to real-world capitalism-requires renewal if Marx’s work is to remain vibrant. In Value in Marx, George Henderson offers a lucid rereading of Marx that strips value of its turgid theoretical reduction and reframes it as an investigation into the tensions between social relations and forms as they are rather than as what they could otherwise become.


Drawing on Marx’s Capital and Grundrisse, Henderson shows how these volumes do not harbor a single theory of value that equates value to capital. Instead, these books experimentally compose and recompose value for a world that is more than capitalist. At stake is how Marx conceives of human freedom, of balanced social arrangements, and of control over the things people produce. Henderson finds that the limits on social becoming, including the tendency toward alienated existence, haunt Marx even as he looks beyond the critique of capital to an emancipated society to come.


Can these limits be confronted in a creative, even joyful, way? Can they become aspects of what we desire, rather than being silenced and denied? As long as we persist in interpreting value broadly, following it as an active and not a shut-down, predetermined feature of Marx’s texts, Henderson ultimately views Marx as responding positively to these challenges and employing value as a powerful tool of the political imaginary.


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Long prone to dogmatic disagreement, the question of value in Marx's thought requires renewal if Marx's work is to remain vibrant. Value in Marx offers a rereading of Marx that strips value of its turgid theoretical reduction and reframes it as an investigation into the tensions between social relations and forms as they are rather than as what they could become.
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Contents


Acknowledgments

Introduction: Did Marx Have a Theory of Value?


Part I

1. The Value-Capital Couplet and How to Break It

2. The Politics of Capitalist “Totality” in a More-Than-Capitalist World


Part II

3. The End of Value (As We Know It)

4. From Necessity to Freedom and Back Again: Abjected Labor and the Taint of Value


Part III

5. The Value Hypothesis: Three Scenes for a Political Imaginary of Value


Notes

Bibliography

Index



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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780816680962
Publisert
2013-03-20
Utgiver
University of Minnesota Press
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
140 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
208

Forfatter

Biografisk notat


George Henderson is associate professor of geography at the University of Minnesota. He is the author of California and the Fictions of Capital and coeditor of Geographic Thought: A Praxis Perspective.