In this essay, I select three privileged examples (or constellations of examples) which arise from my own experience of working with Hegel and his Marxian continuation, by reading and, so to speak, re-writing his sentences, uncovering their latent prerequisites and their ambivalent implications [continue reading here]
Étienne Balibar
3 posts
What makes the final texts of Karl Marx so utterly fascinating and important is that they encapsulate Marx’s post-economic political thought: his political thinking after he had fully articulated his mature political-economic theories. [Continue reading here…]
In Marx 13/13, we return to Marx’s key texts and read them through the lens of world-historical interpretations that pushed Marxian thought and praxis in new directions: toward operaismo or workerism, Black Marxism, feminist, queer and transgender theories, postcolonialism, cultural studies, Freudian or Foucauldian strands of Marxism, as well as Leninist, Maoist, and social democratic forms of Marxism. [Continue reading here…]