Populares posted:Reading the Transformation of the world a global history of the nineteenth century. Reading about coolies.
IC: Can you talk a little bit about the effect of Marx on your thinking and how you came to start reading him?
TP: Marx?
IC: Yeah.
TP: I never managed really to read it. I mean I don’t know if you’ve tried to read it. Have you tried?
IC: Some of his essays, but not the economics work.
TP: The Communist Manifesto of 1848 is a short and strong piece. Das Kapital, I think, is very difficult to read and for me it was not very influential.
IC: Because your book, obviously with the title, it seemed like you were tipping your hat to him in some ways.
TP: No not at all, not at all! The big difference is that my book is a book about the history of capital. In the books of Marx there’s no data.
Themselves posted:hey guys i wrote a book called capital in the twentieth century and it says that we need giant global taxes to fix the world's ills my name is thomas piketty i came to this conclusion after 2.5 million dollars of education
lo posted:TP: No not at all, not at all! The big difference is that my book is a book about the history of capital. In the books of Marx there’s no data.
me talking into my future phone: maybe capitalism is... bad?
*record scratch, pizza guy drops slice of pizza, all traffic in DC halts, nuclear submarine turns around, CIA meeting is abruptly suspended, bomber pilot pulls up, congress goes silent, and a drone with loud speakers appears above my head*
drone: what did you just say about capitalism?
me: uh, fail aids?
drone: false alarm folks, it's just the Rhizzone
*drone blasts through windows before disappearing into the sky*
ideas?
I wasn't too far off
theres a pdf copy if ya hit up libgen
cars posted:I look forward to finding out whether the mysterious new book, “Cyclonopedia”, will be of interest to the rhizzone forums.
I get the sense I'm being mocked!!
I'm not hip ok
Dobble_Wobble posted:I get the sense I'm being mocked!!
I'm not hip ok
we've had at least two, maybe three, different cycles of discussing cyclonopedia here, and its what brought a bunch of people to the forum, so it's just a little funny to get it brought up again.
i wouldn't mind revisiting, never really got into the weeds properly with it last time. the main obstacle is that it's written in a deliberately obscurantist mode and the first third or so isn't really useful (imho) but still needs to be read for the rest of the book to work.
littlegreenpills posted:all these years and no-one wrote up an epub and everyone seems okay with the same terrible scan
i have a physical copy thanks to my local library having a withdrawn sale :smugbird: :smugbirb: :pleasemakethesmugbirdwork:
littlegreenpills posted:all these years and no-one wrote up an epub and everyone seems okay with the same terrible scan
the pdf I got is not that terrible scan. it's feeling like it might be an OCR'd version and it has been OK so far but I'm not sure if its going to go off the rails in quality and need referencing to the scanned original to make sense of errors.
Thus citing examples from every major imperialist power at the time, clearly for Lenin, monopoly power emanated principally from the labour process itself, just as monopoly itself had been formed out of the development of the labour process itself. This was nothing new [for the Marxist analysis]. ...
In Marx's theory, capitalism's chief advantage over pre-capitalist commodity production was superior labour productivity. This was intensified over time because capitalist competition occurred via the constant "revolutionising of the instruments of production" and thus constant improvement in labour productivity. Imperialism does not overturn this fundamental premise but shows that the process of "revolutionising", of production processes had taken on a monopolistic, higher and more powerful form due to the more social manner in which big monopoly capital could carry it forward.
This aspect of Imperialism provides the kernel to understanding what contemporary theory fails to explain—namely how the historical imperialist core countries are able continuously to reproduce their monopolistic supremacy even in the context of rapid spread of commodity production across many of the largest Third World societies. Under monopoly conditions, the position of productive supremacy is monopolised.
Lenin's outline does not constitute a full explanation of the monopolistic domination of highest labour productivity as it has unfolded in the neoliberal period, since it doesn't show the role of the state and of imperialist society more broadly in the reproduction of highest labour productivity within the imperialist core states (ch.4.2). However, it is highly prescient of contemporary competition and shows the embryonic form of what later developed.
all these stupid internet posts arguing about how china is or isn't imperialist without using the word "monopoly" once. and all of the academic works that give mystifying half-answers to the question of imperialist reproduction. reading this paper was a really helpful reorientation for me.
he later presents a brief empirical discussion relating to capital export but it's mostly just to highlight the distance between outward fdi from the prc in africa and that of the great european powers. which is an important counterpoint to the hysteria of the western financial presses, but not particularly related to the qualitative question of imperialist nature. obviously an extremely young (in king's formulation) capitalist power is going to be dwarfed by the neocolonial powers even if they were engaging in imperialist capture.
there's some later vague evasiveness of "well outgoing fdi is a feature of even the poorest nations," but if capital export is used as a mechanism of imperialist capture then there has to be a categorical distinctions between different forms and scales of fdi. and while the prc is nowhere near closing the gap with the dominant imperial powers, it's certainly unclear that its capital export would be in the same category as papua new guinea or guatemala.
king's thesis can't really address these questions because again he devotes very little time to theoretical discussion of the question, which limits its usefulness as a contemporary application of lenin's theory. and it's a very limited contribution to the debates surrounding social imperialism due to the centrality of the question of capital export in those discussions. what it does discuss is pretty valuable tho
Edited by nearlyoctober ()
i don't see any reason to believe this is an "old" or outmoded form, and king seems to unfortunately be straying into the common mistake of confusing typical forms as their categorical limits
or do you mean that king makes an error in inheriting lenin's classification of germany/usa as "younger and stronger" in relation to france and in (mis)identifying lenin's theoretical selection of the primacy of productive monopoly (over e.g. the "usury imperialism" of france)? and so in his application of the theory to the neoliberal period he misses certain modern, "atypical" forms of imperialism? if this is your point then i think this is a fair direction although i still agree with the purported primacy of productive monopoly and the purpose of this thesis.
Edited by nearlyoctober ()
and this limit is also in its ability to intervene in the debates surrounding social imperialism and the role of china -- which again have generally focused on its identification as state-monopoly finance capital operating through capital export, a category that king's narrow application doesn't let him investigate.
Edited by blinkandwheeze ()
Edited by marlax78 ()