ABSTRACT

In this volume, leading scholars from around the world suggest that radical ideologies have shaped complex historical processes in East Asia by examining how intellectuals and activists interpreted, rethought and criticized Marxism in East Asia. The contributors to this volume ask how we can use Marxism to understand East Asia in a global capitalist world, and where the problems that Marxism highlighted, including imperialism, domination and inequality, are increasingly prevalent.

The volume draws on various disciplines to reinterpret Marx, and shed light on the complex dynamics of global capitalism in various historical/national contexts. The distinguished contributors illuminate, rethink and make accessible highly complex Marxist concepts, such as the question of class contradiction, the temporalities of capitalism, real and formal subsumption, relative surplus value and the commodity form, the question of class and the proletariat.

At a time when people around the world are struggling to cope with the crises of global capitalism, this volume on regional responses to capitalism is especially welcome. It will be of interest to students and scholars of East Asian studies, social and political theory, sociology and globalization studies.

chapter 101|10 pages

Introduction

Marxism, space, time and East Asia

part I|74 pages

Perspectives of capital

chapter 1|15 pages

Deprovincializing Marx

Reflections on a cultural dominant

chapter 2|20 pages

Marx, temporality and modernity

chapter 3|22 pages

Two kinds of new poor and their future

The decline and reconfiguration of class politics and the politics of the new poor

part II|129 pages

Trajectories of Marxisms in Japan, China and Korea

chapter 6|16 pages

Value without fetish

Problematizing Uno Kōzō’s reading of the value form 1

chapter 7|18 pages

Compradors

The mediating middle of capitalism in twentieth-century China and the world 1

chapter 8|19 pages

“A vast crucible of electric flame”

Shanghai and the emergence of Chinese Marxism

chapter 9|18 pages

Paradoxical routes of the sinification of Marxism

Materialist dialectic and immanent critique

chapter 10|18 pages

The formation and the limits of the People’s Democracy

A critical history of contemporary South Korean Marxism

chapter 11|21 pages

Imagining Asia and the Chinese Revolution

Takeuchi Yoshimi and his transnational afterlives