The Communist Manifesto (Second Edition) (Norton Critical Editions)

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$11.70 - $24.51
UPC:
9780393935608
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Paperback
Publication Date:
2012-08-29
Author:
Karl Marx
Language:
english
Edition:
2

Product Overview

Karl Marxs 1848 text is reframed in this revised Norton Critical Edition in the context of twenty-first-century theoretical debates, capitalist globalization, the information technology revolution, and contemporary struggles up to and including the 2011 Arab Spring.

Simultaneously extolled in its day as truth incarnate and the inspiration for a life-and-death struggle for humankinds liberation and condemned as the vilest of propaganda on behalf of despotism, the Communist Manifesto continues to be the most potent literary symbol of the struggle over the form and content of freedom.

This revised Norton Critical Edition provides students with the best documentation and scholarship with which to appreciate the Communist Manifestos complexities, context, and legacy of controversy. The Second Edition interprets the Manifesto in relation to the dominance of globalized financial capital, socialist feminist critique, postmodernism, and the fragmentation/transformation of the global working class in the twenty-first century.

The volume includes a carefully annotated text of the Communist Manifesto, the editors historical and philosophical introduction, and a chronology of historical events surrounding publication of the Manifesto. Fifteen seminal interpretationseight of them new to the Second Editionhave been collected. New contributions include Lucien Laurat on the Manifestos sociological standpoint as adapted to the modernization of the mid-twentieth century; Wendy Lynne Lees assessment of the Manifestos key concepts, metaphors, and arguments from a radical-feminist perspective; the article that served as the basis for Empire, Michael Hardt and Antonio Negris important postmodernist adaptation of the Manifesto for twenty-first century conditions; and noteworthy responses to Hardt and Negris arguments by Slavoj Zizek and by Taki Fotopoulos and Alexandros Gezerlis.

A Selected Bibliography and Index are also included.

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