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Global Marx coheres a collective assessment of Marx's account of capital's domination, through his critique of disciplinary languages, investigation of political structures and analysis of specific political spaces within the world market. His discourse appears here as global not only because global is the geography of the world market but also because Marx redefined the relationships between the spaces on which capital exerts its command. Global Marx proves that Marx's texts do not identify any global working class, nor a centre of power to be conquered, but show that – within and against the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Global Marx coheres a collective assessment of Marx's account of capital's domination, through his critique of disciplinary languages, investigation of political structures and analysis of specific political spaces within the world market. His discourse appears here as global not only because global is the geography of the world market but also because Marx redefined the relationships between the spaces on which capital exerts its command. Global Marx proves that Marx's texts do not identify any global working class, nor a centre of power to be conquered, but show that – within and against the world market – there is a social movement that is irreducible to any identity or to a single space from whose perspective one can write a universal history of class struggle.   Contributors are: Luca Basso, Michele Basso, Matteo Battistini, Eleonora Cappuccilli, Michele Cento, Luca Cobbe, Isabella Consolati, Niccolò Cuppini, Roberta Ferrari, Michele Filippini, Giorgio Grappi, Maurizio Merlo, Mario Piccinini, Fabio Raimondi, Maurizio Ricciardi, Paola Rudan, and Federico Tomasello.
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Autorenporträt
Matteo Battistini, Ph.D. (2008), University of Bologna, is Associate Professor of U.S. History at that university. He has published monographs and articles on American political and intellectual history, including Middle Class: An Intellectual History through Social Sciences. An American Fetish from its Origins to Globalization (Brill, 2022).   Eleonora Cappuccilli, Ph.D. (2016), is Core Fellow at Villa I Tatti, The Harvard University Center for Italian Renaissance Studies. She has published articles and monographs on women's political and religious thought in Renaissance and early modern Europe and feminist political theory. Maurizio Ricciardi, Ph.D. (1996), is Associate Professor of History of Political Thought at the University of Bologna. He has published articles and monographs on the history of political and social concepts and political modern thought. His last book is Il potere temporaneo. Karl Marx e la politica come critica della società (Meltemi, 2019).