- The Enduring Relevance of Karl Marx
- Historical Materialism
- Class and Class Struggle
- Forces of Production and Relations of Production
- The Eight Steps in Marx’s Dialectical Method
- Ideology as Alienated Socialization
- Marx’s Conceptualization of Value in <i>Capital</i>
- Value and Class
- Money
- Capital
- Capital: A Revolutionary Social Form
- The Grammar of <i>Capital</i>: Wealth In-Against-and-Beyond Value
- Work and Exploitation in Capitalism: The Labor Process and the Valorization Process
- Capital in General and Competition: The Production and Distribution of Surplus Value
- Reproduction and Crisis in Capitalist Economies
- The Capitalist State and State Power
- Capitalist Social Reproduction: The Contradiction between Production and Social Reproduction Under Capitalism
- Karl Marx on Technology in Capitalism
- Alienation, or Why Capitalism is Bad for Us
- The Commodification of Knowledge and Information
- Labor Unions and Movements
- Migration and the Mobility of Labor
- The League of Revolutionary Black Workers and Race, Class, and Revolution in the Twenty-First Century
- Nationalism, Class, and Revolution
- Hegemony: A Theory of National-Popular Class Politics
- Capitalist Crises and the State
- European “Integration”
- The Urbanization of Capital and the Production of Capitalist Natures
- The Marxian Long View: Stages of Capitalism and Social Structures of Accumulation
- Geriatric Capitalism: Stagnation and Crisis in the Atlantic Post-Fordist Accumulation Regime
- Sociopoiesis: Understanding Crisis in the Capitalist World-System through Complexity Sciences
- Towards a Marxist Theory of Financialized Capitalism
- Metabolic Rifts and the Ecological Crisis
- Global Capital Accumulation and the Specificity of Latin America
- The Unresolved Agrarian Question in South Asia
- Asia and the Shift in Marx’s Conception of Revolution and History
- Marx and the Middle East
- Primitive Accumulation in Post-Soviet Russia
- Marx’s Concept of Socialism
- Democratic Socialist Planning
- The Continuing Relevance of the Marxist Tradition for Transcending Capitalism
Abstract and Keywords
Through a revisit of the evolution of Marx’s ideas about Oriental society and the village community, this chapter explores the methodological meaning of Asia for the Marxist conception of history and demonstrates its contemporary relevance. Following Marx’s original cases of India, China, and Russia, the chapter traces how eventually in his analysis national liberation and class struggle became mutually indispensable and why the oldest forms of social organization could be transformed into the newest as the communist project. This textual study of a remarkable intellectual trajectory begins with a critical examination of Marx’s Asiatic mode of production and then looks into the major twists and leaps in his later reflections, and concludes with a tentative appraisal of the significance of his eastward turn. Marx’s non-deterministic history with a strong agential as well as ecological consciousness is shown to be an indispensable source for contemporary Marxist rethinking of historical and global transformations.
Keywords: Marx, Asia, history, revolution, village community, communism
Lin Chun, London School of Economics
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- The Enduring Relevance of Karl Marx
- Historical Materialism
- Class and Class Struggle
- Forces of Production and Relations of Production
- The Eight Steps in Marx’s Dialectical Method
- Ideology as Alienated Socialization
- Marx’s Conceptualization of Value in <i>Capital</i>
- Value and Class
- Money
- Capital
- Capital: A Revolutionary Social Form
- The Grammar of <i>Capital</i>: Wealth In-Against-and-Beyond Value
- Work and Exploitation in Capitalism: The Labor Process and the Valorization Process
- Capital in General and Competition: The Production and Distribution of Surplus Value
- Reproduction and Crisis in Capitalist Economies
- The Capitalist State and State Power
- Capitalist Social Reproduction: The Contradiction between Production and Social Reproduction Under Capitalism
- Karl Marx on Technology in Capitalism
- Alienation, or Why Capitalism is Bad for Us
- The Commodification of Knowledge and Information
- Labor Unions and Movements
- Migration and the Mobility of Labor
- The League of Revolutionary Black Workers and Race, Class, and Revolution in the Twenty-First Century
- Nationalism, Class, and Revolution
- Hegemony: A Theory of National-Popular Class Politics
- Capitalist Crises and the State
- European “Integration”
- The Urbanization of Capital and the Production of Capitalist Natures
- The Marxian Long View: Stages of Capitalism and Social Structures of Accumulation
- Geriatric Capitalism: Stagnation and Crisis in the Atlantic Post-Fordist Accumulation Regime
- Sociopoiesis: Understanding Crisis in the Capitalist World-System through Complexity Sciences
- Towards a Marxist Theory of Financialized Capitalism
- Metabolic Rifts and the Ecological Crisis
- Global Capital Accumulation and the Specificity of Latin America
- The Unresolved Agrarian Question in South Asia
- Asia and the Shift in Marx’s Conception of Revolution and History
- Marx and the Middle East
- Primitive Accumulation in Post-Soviet Russia
- Marx’s Concept of Socialism
- Democratic Socialist Planning
- The Continuing Relevance of the Marxist Tradition for Transcending Capitalism