"Now let me tell you how my political economy is getting on. I have in fact 
been at work on the final stages for some months. But the thing is 
proceeding very slowly because no sooner does one set about finally 
disposing of subjects to which one has devoted years of study than they 
start revealing new aspects and demand to be thought out further. On top of 
which I am not master of my time but rather its slave. Only the nights are 
left for my own work, which in turn is often disrupted by bilious attacks or 
recurrences of liver trouble. All things considered it would be most 
convenient for me to bring out the whole work in instalments without any 
rigid datelines. This might also have the advantage of making it easier to 
find a publisher, since less working capital would be tied up in the 
venture. You would, of course, oblige me by trying to find someone in Berlin 
prepared to undertake this. By 'instalments', I mean fascicles similar to 
those in which Vischer's Aesthetik came out.
The work I am presently concerned with is a Critique of Economic Categories 
or, if you like, a critical exposé of the system of the bourgeois economy. 
It is at once an exposé and, by the same token, a critique of the system. I 
have very little idea how many sheets the whole thing will amount to. Had I 
the means, the time and the leisure to finish the whole thing off completely 
prior to placing it before the public, I would condense it a great deal, a 
method for which I have always had a predilection. But printed thus, in 
successive instalments - easier for readers to understand perhaps but 
certainly detrimental to the form - it is bound to be rather more diffuse. 
Nota bene: As soon as you know definitely whether or not the thing can be 
done in Berlin, kindly write to me, since if it's no go there I'll try 
Hamburg. A further point is that I must be paid by the publisher who takes 
the thing on - a stipulation over which it might come to grief in Berlin.
The presentation - the manner of it, I mean - is entirely scientific, hence 
unobjectionable to the police in the ordinary sense. The whole is divided 
into 6 books: 1. On Capital (contains a few introductory Chapters). 2. On 
Landed Property. 3. On Wage Labour. 4. On the State. 5. International Trade. 
6. World Market. I cannot, of course, avoid all critical consideration of 
other economists, in particular a polemic against Ricardo in as much as even 
he, qua bourgeois, cannot but commit blunders even from a strictly economic 
viewpoint. But generally speaking the critique and history of political 
economy and socialism would form the subject of another work, and, finally, 
the short historical outline of the development of economic categories and 
relations yet a third. Now that I am at last ready to set to work after 15 
years of study, I have an uncomfortable feeling that turbulent movements 
from without will probably interfere after all. Never mind. If I finish too 
late and thus find the world no longer attentive to such subjects, the fault 
is clearly my own. 
http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1858/letters/58_02_22.htm
E-mail message checked by Spyware Doctor (6.0.0.362)
Database version: 5.10260
http://www.pctools.com/uk/spyware-doctor-antivirus/
_______________________________________________
ope mailing list
ope@lists.csuchico.edu
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/ope
Received on Wed May 27 15:33:27 2009
This archive was generated by hypermail 2.1.8 : Sun May 31 2009 - 00:00:03 EDT