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Re: Derrida down under
>> "rc-am" <rcollins@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> 10/04/99 11:21PM >>>
and, i have yet to see any substantial discussion of the situation in east
timor or yugoslavia which takes account of the shape and character of class
struggles in those places and related terrains other than amongst the
so-called ultra-left (not to be confused with max's definition of such).
most of this analysis (when it actually becomes analysis and moves beyond
delivering the line) has tended to portray nation-states as the only
'actors' or significant variables. and all of these rarely get denounced
as either apolitical or ahistorical or even as non-marxist -- though i
would argue that the absence of labour (and capital as s-v) is
paradoxically most absent amongst those who most emphatically want to pose
as marxists in cyberspace.
(((((((((((((((
Charles: Lenin's analysis in _Imperialism_ , augmented by the historical
developments
of the last 80 years makes the links between analysis of imperialist
nation-states,
colonial and neo-colonial nation states, labor/capital, class struggle and
surplus-value. There have been plenty of non-ultra left applications of this to
recent
and historical events in E. Timor and Yugoslavia. This was why Marxists on
these lists
were arguing against those who denied an economic motive for the U.S./NATO
actions,
for example.
looks to me like it (labour as the irreconcilable antagonism within
capital) is pretty well missing all round.
perhaps lebowitz and negri are right. the problem with marx, or at least
received readings of his stuff, is a result of what we might call the
'missing book on the wage' or somesuch...the connection between surplus
value and capital as a political-economic figuration.
(((((((((((
Charles; See also, _The State and Revolution_ on the connection between surplus
value
and capital as a political-economic figuration. The state is an apparatus for
the
repression of one class by another.
Actually, the current world situation is a form of Kautsky's theory of
ultra-imperialism. Imperialism has radically reduced its inter-imperialist
rivalry
from that period, a possibility that Kautsky foresaw.
These theories form a critical link between Marx/Engels and the world current
situation.
We have to supplement Lenin and Kautsky with facts and theory of the history
since
their period. Central to this is the history of the Soviet Union and other
socialist
countries, and their struggle with imperialist nations, and the liberation of
the
whole paleo-colonial system, and its replacement by neo-colonialist relations.
The
export of capital , transnational finance capital ( expressed in neo-colonial
control
by debt) and counter-revolutionary wars (use of the bourgeois state apparatus to
repress the exploited classes in the neo-colonies) against national liberation
movements to protect transnational capital are major factors in the connection
between
nation-states , capital and surplus-value.
CB
- Thread context:
- Re: Fellow workers, (continued)
- FW: The Struggle Continues,
Craven, Jim Tue 05 Oct 1999, 18:11 GMT
- Re: Derrida down under,
Charles Brown Tue 05 Oct 1999, 16:51 GMT
- What's in latest Green Left Weekly? #379 October 6,
Green Left Parramatta Tue 05 Oct 1999, 07:07 GMT
- On European Union,
sipila Tue 05 Oct 1999, 04:18 GMT
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