Capital and its discontents Conversations with radical thinkers in a time of tumult

Book - 2011

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Subjects
Published
Oakland, CA : PM Press c2011.
Language
English
Other Authors
Sasha Lilley, 1970- (-)
Physical Description
279 p. ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 263-267) and index.
ISBN
9781604863345
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Empire, Neoliberalism, Crisis
  • Chapter 1. Empire in the Age of Capital
  • Chapter 2. The Rise of Neoliberalism and the Riddle of Capital
  • Chapter 3. Demystifying Globalization
  • Chapter 4. The Global Economic Meltdown
  • Chapter 5. Capitalist Crisis and Radical Renewal
  • Part II. Commodification, Enclosure, and the Contradictions of Capitalism
  • Chapter 6. The Ecological Dimensions of Marx's Thought
  • Chapter 7. The Socio-Ecological Crises of Capitalism
  • Chapter 8. The Agrarian Question and Multiple Paths of Capitalist Development in East Asia and South Africa
  • Chapter 9. Labor and Capital, Gender and Commodification
  • Part III. Alternatives?
  • Chapter 10. National Capitalism in the Third World
  • Chapter 11. Isaac Deutscher and the Old Left
  • Chapter 12. Anti-imperialism and the New Left, Revolt and Retrenchment
  • Chapter 13. Postmodernism and the Politics of Expression
  • Chapter 14. Anarchism, Council Communism, and Life After Capitalism
  • Chapter 15. Libertarian Socialism for the Twenty-First Century
  • Acknowledgments
  • Contributors
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This rich selection of interviews with left-wing intellectuals and activists mostly grows out of the syndicated Pacifica Radio program Against the Grain, cofounded by host and author Lilley. Lilley (and in one case her colleague, cofounder C.S. Soong) engages this international assortment of thinkers-from the well-known (David Harvey) to the less widely familiar (Doug Henwood, editor-publisher of the Left Business Observer)-with an informed, astute intelligence. Fifteen chapters come divided into three sections treating the relation between empire and neoliberalism in a period of global crisis, the contradictions of capitalism, and alternatives (including reconsiderations of Marxist and anarchist ideas by Tariq Ali, Noam Chomsky, and Mike Davis). The bite-size flow of the interview format is an ideal one for digesting large, complex subjects like the historical specificity of modern capitalist empire (as elegantly explained by Ellen Meiksins Wood). If there is a common theme throughout, it is what Lilley herself flags in an insightful introduction: "the answer to the crises of nature and capital lies in public abundance replacing private wealth." This cool-headed but urgent volume-timely but sophisticated and wide-ranging enough to remain a longtime reference-will serve as an excellent introduction for readers lacking familiarity with discourse in political economy, while providing important elaboration on central themes for those with more background. (July) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved