Capital: The Communist Manifesto and Other WritingsModern Library, 1932 - Broj stranica: 429 Communism as a political movement attained global importance after the Bolsheviks toppled the Russian Czar in 1917. After that time the works of Karl Marx, especially the influential Communist Manifesto (1848), enjoyed an international audience. The world was to learn a new political vocabulary peppered with "socialism," "capitalism," "the working class," "the bourgeoisie," "labor theory of value," "alienation," "economic determinism," "dialectical materialism," and "historical materialism." Marx's economic analysis of history has been a powerful legacy, the effects of which continue to be felt world-wide. Marx offers his theory of human nature and an analysis of emerging capitalism's degenerative impact on man's sense of self and his creative potential. What is man's true nature? How did capitalism gain such a foothold on Western society? What is alienation and how does it threaten to undermine the proletariat? These and other vital questions are addressed as the youthful Marx sets forth his first detailed assessment of the human condition. |
Sadržaj
Editors Preface | 15 |
Profit and Value in Circulation | 24 |
Purchase and Sale of Labour Power | 34 |
Autorska prava | |
Broj ostalih dijelova koji nisu prikazani: 12
Ostala izdanja - Prikaži sve
Capital, the Communist Manifesto and Other Writings Karl Marx,Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin Prikaz isječka - 1932 |
Capital: The Communist Manifesto and Other Writings Karl Marx,Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin Prikaz isječka - 1932 |
Capital: The Communist Manifesto and Other Writings Karl Marx,Vladimir Ilʹich Lenin Prikaz isječka - 1932 |
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
accumulation agricultural amount becomes bourgeois bourgeoisie branches capi capitalist production cent commercial capital commodities Commune Communists consequently constant capital consumed consumption costs cotton demand division of labour duction employed exchange exchange value existence exploitation Extracted from vol fact factory feudal functions German gold greater hand handicraft Hence increase independent individual capital individual capitalist instruments of labour interest labour power latter less machine machinery manufacture mass means of production means of subsistence ment mode of production modern industry modity money capital necessary number of labourers Paris peasant petty bourgeois political population process of production productive capital productiveness of labour proletariat proportion purchase quantity rate of profit raw material revolution selling social society spindles surplus surplus-labour surplus-value talist Thiers tion trade tradesman transformation use-value variable capital wage-labourers wages whole workers working-day working-time workmen yarn