9780822327097-0822327090-Re/presenting Class: Essays in Postmodern Marxism

Re/presenting Class: Essays in Postmodern Marxism

ISBN-13: 9780822327097
ISBN-10: 0822327090
Author: J. K. Gibson-Graham, Richard Wolff, Stephen Resnick
Publication date: 2001
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Format: Hardcover 336 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9780822327097
ISBN-10: 0822327090
Author: J. K. Gibson-Graham, Richard Wolff, Stephen Resnick
Publication date: 2001
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Format: Hardcover 336 pages

Summary

Re/presenting Class: Essays in Postmodern Marxism (ISBN-13: 9780822327097 and ISBN-10: 0822327090), written by authors J. K. Gibson-Graham, Richard Wolff, Stephen Resnick, was published by Duke University Press Books in 2001. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other books. You can easily purchase or rent Re/presenting Class: Essays in Postmodern Marxism (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.31.

Description

Re/presenting Class is a collection of essays that develops a poststructuralist Marxian conception of class in order to theorize the complex contemporary economic terrain. Both building upon and reconsidering a tradition that Stephen Resnick and Richard Wolff—two of this volume’s editors—began in the late 1980s with their groundbreaking work Knowledge and Class, contributors aim to correct previous research that has largely failed to place class as a central theme in economic analysis. Suggesting the possibility of a new politics of the economy, the collection as a whole focuses on the diversity and contingency of economic relations and processes.
Investigating a wide range of cases, the essays illuminate, for instance, the organizational and cultural means by which unmeasured surpluses—labor that occurs outside the formal workplace‚ such as domestic work—are distributed and put to use. Editors Resnick and Wolff, along with J. K. Gibson-Graham, bring theoretical essays together with those that apply their vision to topics ranging from the Iranian Revolution to sharecropping in the Mississippi Delta to the struggle over the ownership of teaching materials at a liberal arts college. Rather than understanding class as an element of an overarching capitalist social structure, the contributors—from radical and cultural economists to social scientists—define class in terms of diverse and ongoing processes of producing, appropriating, and distributing surplus labor and view class identities as multiple, changing, and interacting with other aspects of identity in contingent and unpredictable ways.
Re/presenting Class will appeal primarily to scholars of Marxism and political economy.

Contributors. Carole Biewener, Anjan Chakrabarti, Stephen Cullenberg, Fred Curtis, Satyananda Gabriel, J. K. Gibson-Graham, Serap Kayatekin, Bruce Norton, Phillip O’Neill, Stephen Resnick, David Ruccio, Dean Saitta, Andriana Vlachou, Richard Wolff

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