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For Marx

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
1965 book by Louis Althusser
For Marx
Cover of the first edition
AuthorLouis Althusser
Original titlePour Marx
TranslatorBen Brewster
LanguageFrench
SubjectKarl Marx
PublisherFrançois Maspero, Allen Lane
Publication date
1965
Publication placeFrance
Published in English
1969
Media typePrint (Hardcover andPaperback)
Pages258 (first edition)
ISBN978-1844670529

For Marx (French:Pour Marx) is a 1965 book by the philosopherLouis Althusser,[1] a leading theoretician of theFrench Communist Party (PCF), in which the author reinterprets the work of the philosopherKarl Marx, proposing anepistemological break between theyoung, Hegelian Marx, and the old Marx, the author ofDas Kapital (1867–1883). The book, first published in France byFrançois Maspero, established Althusser's reputation. The texts presented inFor Marx are theoretical interventions in a definite conjuncture, particularly aiming at the definition of the lines to be pursued by the PCF after Stalin's years in the Soviet Union. Althusser's position is of theoreticalantihumanism, and is against theteleology of history. Althusser defends that history is a process without subject and with an open end, but that has determinations that can be theorized by the science of history as constructed by Marx in his mature work,Das Kapital. Society is then conceptualized as a complex whole articulated in dominance by the economy where several social practices co-exist with a relative autonomy, introducing the conceptoverdetermination to characterize the levels of effectivity.

Background, contents and publication history

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Except for its introduction, the chapters ofFor Marx first appeared as articles that were published in journals of the French Communist Party between 1960 and 1964.[2]For Marx was first published in 1965 by François Maspero. An Italian translation was published in 1967,[3] and an English translation, by Ben Brewster, in 1969. The book has been published in English byVerso Books[4] with its most recent edition dating 2005. The book is composed of the following essays:[5]

To My English Readers

Introduction: Today

1. Feuerbach’s ‘Philosophical Manifestoes’

2. ‘On the Young Marx’

3. Contradiction and Overdetermination

4. The ‘Piccolo Teatro’: Bertolazzi and Brecht

5. The ‘1844 Manuscripts’ of Karl Marx

6. On the Materialist Dialectic

7. Marxism and Humanism

Reception

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For Marx established Althusser's reputation.[6] Together withReading Capital (1965), the book drew Althusser to the attention of French intellectuals and attracted a significant international readership.[7] It provided one of the most politically influential of the philosophical reinterpretations ofDas Kapital that were made by Marxists in the 1960s and 1970s.[8] The appearance ofReading Capital andFor Marx in English translation influenced the development of Marxist thought in the Anglophone world throughout the 1970s.[7] However,For Marx has attracted criticism from both anti-Marxists, such as the conservative philosopherRoger Scruton, and from Marxist theorists, such as the Marxian economistHarry Cleaver.[9][10] According to the philologistSebastiano Timpanaro, the Marxist Italian philosopherCesare Luporini, despite his largely favorable view of Althusser, commented that Althusser's anti-humanism "manifests itself in a tendency to make man disappear as much as possible from the framework of the so-called human sciences."[3] This position has been refuted by Althusser himself in later texts, especiallyThe Humanist Controversy.[11]

'For Marx'-bubble:WikidataSPARQL-query regarding editions of Althusser'sFor Marx

Scruton maintains thatFor Marx is poorly written and obscure.[12][13] Scruton criticizes Althusser for employing technical terms without explaining them. He also argues that it is doubtful that Althusser's interpretation of historical materialism is true to Marx's intentions, and that it does not deserve to be considered a coherent theory, that it effectively abandons the Marxian thesis thatbase determines superstructure, that it effectively abandons historical materialism itself, that it is irrefutable in the sense that no possible event would be inconsistent with it, and that it makes no useful predictions.[9] He further suggests that Althusser's supporters had difficulty agreeing on howFor Marx should be understood.[13]

Cleaver considersFor Marx andReading Capital an attempt by Althusser and his colleagues to reinterpret Marx with the "aim of revitalizingdialectical materialism as an ideology to mediate the widely discredited political practices of the French Communist Party." He criticizes Althusser's science of history for being ahistorical and abstract. According to Cleaver, Althusser was subsequently critical ofFor Marx, believing that it largely ignored the class struggle. Cleaver writes that the only revision Althusser considered necessary was to redefine philosophy, from being a "theory of theoretical practice" to being "the class struggle in theory", and that Althusser thus retained the basic theoretical structure ofFor Marx.[10]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Lewis, William (2018),"Louis Althusser", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.),The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2018 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved2021-06-30
  2. ^Althusser 2005, p. 9.
  3. ^abTimpanaro 1980, p. 68.
  4. ^Althusser 2005, p. 4.
  5. ^"For Marx. Louis Althusser 1962".www.marxists.org. Retrieved2021-06-30.
  6. ^Scruton 1985, pp. 217–218.
  7. ^abLevine 2017, p. 27.
  8. ^Cleaver 2000, pp. 46–47.
  9. ^abScruton 1985, pp. 92–94.
  10. ^abCleaver 2000, pp. 46–47, 49–51.
  11. ^Althusser, Louis (2003).The Humanist Controversy and Other Writings (1966-67). Verso.ISBN 978-1-85984-408-3.
  12. ^Scruton 1985, p. 92.
  13. ^abScruton 2010, p. 182.

Bibliography

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Books

External links

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