190 Pages
by
Routledge
640 Pages
by
Routledge
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In this issue class revolution is discovered in a perhaps unlikely context- the paid domestic labor of African-American women. Analyzing the changing economic relationship between African-American women and white households, from end of slavery to the late 1970s, Cecilia Rio uses the concepts of Marxian class analysis and a wealth of empirical evidence to demonstrate that African-American women were historical agents of fundamental class transformation. Also in this edition- articles on Humanities, Surplus,Communism to Capitalism,Categories of Class Analysis, Contingent Commodification’s of Labor Power and more.
On the Move: African American Women's Paid Domestic Labor and the Class Transition to Independent Commodity Production; Telegraph; Farewell to the Humanities; Who Appropriates the Surplus?;Rethinking the Past- for the Future; From Communism to Capitalism: Rethinking the Boundaries of Class Analysis; The Categories of Class Analysis and the Soviet Experience: A Reply to Victor Lippit, Satya Gabriel and Jonathan Diskin; Haiku Economics No 2; Reification, Resistance and Ironic Empiricism in Georg Simmel's Philosophy of Money; Why Spinoza Today? Or A Strategy of Anti-Fear?; Capitals' Dice-Box Shaking: the Contingent Commodification’s of Labor Power; Remarx; Reviews; Notes on Contributors
Biography
David F. Ruccio (Edited by)