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Fall
2002 Class at Brecht Forum
========================
MARX'S COMMENTARIES ON
"CAPITAL"
Andrew Kliman
6 sessions beginning October 1
1st
& 3rd Tuesdays of the month, 7:30-9:30 pm.
At the Brecht
Forum,
122 West 27th St., 10th floor, New York, NY
(212)
242-4201.
Tuition is $45-$65 (sliding
scale).
Course
Description
===============
Karl Marx's Capital continues to
provide unique insights into contemporary global capitalism and the
possibilities for social change. Yet the book is a difficult one and there
persist many debates about what it means. Wouldn't it be great to hear --
from the author himself -- what he intended?
We will focus on two
writings by Marx that shed great illumination on Volume I:
(1) "Results
of the Immediate Production Process," about 140 pages long, was originally
intended as the book's concluding chapter. Drawing conclusions from his
analysis of capitalist production, Marx discusses machine production as the real
subsumption of labor under capital, alienated labor, productive vs. unproductive
labor, and capitalists as the personification of capital.
(2) "Notes on
Adolph Wagner," about 40 pages long, is his response to the German economist's
1879 critique of Capital. Marx sharply separates his own
understanding of "commodity," "value," and "exchange-value" from what he
regarded as Wagner's misinterpretations, and offers insightful comments on the
method of Chapter 1.
The course is designed especially for folks who have
read Volume I of Capital, but who want to gain a deeper
understanding. Those who are currently reading it, or who wish to read
portions of it concurrently with Marx's commentaries, are also
welcome.
Students should read Section I of "Results" (at the end of the
Penguin/Vintage edition of Capital, Vol. I) for the first class.
For other readings and the course syllabus, contact the instructor at
Andrew_Kliman@xxxxxxx
Instructor
========
Andrew Kliman teaches
economics at a local college, and has recently taught a course on "Economic
Crisis and Crisis Theory" at the Brecht Forum. His writings on
Marx's critique of political economy have appeared in Marx and
Non-equilibrium Economics, Capital and Class, Historical Materialism, and
elsewhere.
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