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From Marx to Hegel and Back: Capitalism, Critique, and Utopia

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Overview

The relation between Hegel and Marx is among the most interpreted in the history of philosophy. Given the contemporary renaissance of Marx and Marxist theories, how should we re-read the Hegel-Marx connection today? What place does Hegel have in contemporary critical thinking?

Most schools of Marxism regard Marx’s inversion of Hegel’s dialectics as a progressive development, leaving behind Hegel’s idealism by transforming it into a materialist critique of political economy. Other Marxist approaches argue that the mature Marx completely broke with Hegel. By contrast, this book offers a wide-ranging and innovative understanding of Hegel as an empirically informed theorist of the social, political, and economic world. It proposes a movement ’from Marx to Hegel and back’, by exploring the intersections where the two thinkers can be read as mutually complementing or even reinforcing one another.

With a particular focus on essential concepts like recognition, love, revolution, freedom, and the idea of critique, this new intervention into Hegelian and Marxian philosophy unifies the ethical content of Hegel’s philosophy with the power of Marx’s social and economic critique of the contemporary world.

Provides a basis for contemporary social critique by uniting Marx’s social and economic critique with the ethical foundations of Hegel’s philosophy.

Radically re-examines the relationship between Marx and Hegel, showing the ways their philosophies in fact complement and reinforce one another rather than oppose
Contributions from scholars including Rebecca Comay, Frederick Neuhouser, Frank Ruda and Rocío Zambrana
Responds to the increasing demand for new scholarship on Marx and his influences
Argues for an innovative, ‘materialist’ re-understanding of Hegel

From Marx to Hegel and Back: Toward a Helical Approach, Victoria Fareld (Stockholm University, Sweden) and Hannes Kuch(Hanover Institute of Philosophical Research, Germany)

I. Reassessing the Legacy of Hegel and Marx
Hegel and Marx: A Reassessment after One Century, Axel Honneth (University of Frankfurt, Germany and Columbia University, USA)
Hegel, Marx, and Presentism, Emmanuel Renault (Paris West University Nanterre La Défense, France)
Property and Freedom in Kant, Hegel, and Marx, Jacob Blumenfeld (New School for Social Research, USA)
I, the Revolution, Speak: Lenin’s Speculative (Hegelian) Style, Frank Ruda (University of Frankfurt, Germany)

II. Capitalism and Critique
Critique in Hegel and Marx, Rocío Zambrana (University of Oregon, USA)
Hegel and Marx on ‘Spiritual Life’ as a Criterion for Social Critique, Frederick Neuhouser (Columbia University, USA)
Abstract Labor and Recognition, Sven Ellmers(Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg, Germany)
Love Will Tear Us Apart: Marx and Hegel on the Materiality of Erotic Bonds, Federica Gregoratto(University of St. Gallen, Switzerland)

III. Postcapitalism and Utopia
Marx’s ‘Hegelian’ Critique of Utopia, David Leopold (University of Oxford, UK)
Where Are We Developing the Requirements for a New Society? The Dialectic of Today’s Capitalism from a Hegelian Marxist Perspective, Eva Bockenheimer (University of Siegen, Germany)
Social Freedom beyond Capitalism: Three Alternatives, Hannes Kuch (Hanover Institute of Philosophical Research, Germany)
Honneth’s Democratic ‘Sittlichkeit’ and Market Socialism, Michael Nance (University of Maryland, USA)

Contributors
Sources
Index

A source of knowledge about contemporary critical theory.

The legacy of Hegel’s concepts and method within Marx’s thinking is one of the most decisive and most contested issues in contemporary critical theory. In the last two decades, new interpretations of Hegel and a renewed interest in the diagnostic power of Marx’s writings have challenged many of the established assumptions and made a full reassessment of that key theoretical nexus necessary. This volume, which brings together up-and-coming scholars and some of the best experts in the field, is a major contribution towards that goal.

These vital and necessary essays argue for the renewal and refashioning of the radical tradition of Hegelian-Marxism. Collectively, the seek to install a materialist Hegel; an always Hegelian Marx; a formation of critical theory driven by the force of the negative and struggles for recognition; and, above all, for tomorrow’s socialism in which social freedom and democratic self-determination might come to be. Urgent and important.

Victoria Fareld is Associate Professor of Intellectual History at the Department of Culture and Aesthetics at Stockholm University, Sweden.

Hannes Kuch is a Postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Philosophy, Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany.

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