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Alienation Marx's Conception of Man in Capitalist Society
Ollman, Bertell http://www.nyu.edu/projects/ollman/books/a.php
Publisher: Cambridge University Press, London, United Kingdom Year Published: 1971 Pages: 325pp ISBN: 0-521-09813-0 Dewey: 320.5315 Resource Type: Book
Ollman reconstructs Marx's theory of alienation from its constituent parts and offers it as a vantage point from which to view the rest of Marxism. The book further contains a detailed examination of Marx's philosophy of internal relations, the much neglected logical foundation of his method, and provides a systematic account of Marx's conception of human nature.
Abstract: -
Table of Contents
Note on Translations General Introduction Part 1. Philosophical Introduction 1. With words that appear like bats 2. Social relations as subject matter 3. The philosophy of internal relations 4. Is there a Marxian ethic? 5. Dialectic as outlook 6. Dialectic as inquiry and exposition Summary
Part II: Marx's Conception of Human Nature 7. Powers and needs 8. Natural man 9. Species man 10. Relating man to objects: orientation, perception 11. Appropriation 12. Nature as evidence 13. Activity, work, creativity 14. Man's social nature 15. The character of the species 16. Freedom as essence 17. Man, classes, people Summary
Part III: The Theory of Alienation 18. The theory of alienation 19. Man's relation to his productive activity 20. Man's relation to his product 21. Man's relation to his fellow men 22. Man's relation to his species 23. The capitalist's alienation 24. The division of labor and private property 25. The labor theory of value: labor-power 26. Value as alienated labor 27. The metamorphosis of value 28. The fetishism of commodities 29. Class as a value Relation 30. State as a value Relation 31. Religion as a value Relation Summary
Part IV: Conclusion 32. A critical evaluation
Appendix Notes to the text Bibliography of works cited Index of names and ideas
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