ABSTRACT

'Controversy was the breath of Marx's life and he revelled in it. We are therefore not at all apologetic', wrote Puran Chand Joshi in the preface to Karl Marx: A Symposium, published in 1968 commemorating the 150th birth anniversary of Marx, adding further, (It is) 'in the best Indian tradition to operate with belief and hope that it is only through the clash of ideas that truth emerges.' At a time, when a Marxian renaissance has been taking place in academia, Joshi's words reverberate with a new vitality, an evanescence of 'official Marxism' and official Marxist parties notwithstanding. There is no denying that the so-called Marxists now pay dearly for wavering 'between a rather mechanistic interpretation of crisis and its opposite: the conviction that capitalism could only be overcome by an act of will.'

This book is the outcome of an international conference on Karl Marx  organised by ADRI in Patna between June 16 and 20, 2018 keeping the new Marxian reality in mind. Over 50 scholars from across the world sent papers to the Conference, covering topics such as economics, politics, society, philosophy, etc. ADRI welcomed them with an open mind in sync with the Marxian reawakening that treats Marx historically and critically.

This book is co-published with Aakar Books, New Delhi. Taylor & Francis does not sell or distribute the print versions of this book in India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|31 pages

Marx's Theory of Prehistory

In Memory of György Márkus. My Great Master Whom I Never Met

chapter 5|22 pages

From Early Marx to Véquaud's Countercultural Indophilia

Similar Aesthetics Founded on Romanticism and Communitarian

chapter 7|29 pages

The Untimely Marx

Marx's Critique of Political Economy and the Political Dimension of Critical Economics 1

chapter 9|24 pages

Historical Process and Gender Essentialism from a Dialectical Point of View

A Contribution to a Marxian Feminist Theory

chapter 12|12 pages

From Hegemony to Full Control Kind of Elite, If Any, is Necessary for the Masters of the Universe?

Reading Antonio Gramsci About the Role of the Intelligentsia, Yesterday and Tomorrow

chapter 13|7 pages

Karl Marx and the Opium War