From: Dogan Goecmen (Dogangoecmen@AOL.COM)
Date: Tue Jan 02 2007 - 14:28:25 EST
A new book on Marx's Capital. Dogan
attached mail follows:
please feel free to forward this announcement --------------------------------------------- Just Published, January 2007 ============================ RECLAIMING MARX'S "CAPITAL" A REFUTATION OF THE MYTH OF INCONSISTENCY by Andrew Kliman 250 pages, copyright 2007. Published by Lexington Books, a division of Rowman & Littlefield. Part of Lexington's Raya Dunayevskaya Series in Marxism and Humanism. List price: $26.95. ONLY $22.91 AT PUBLISHER'S WEBSITE, www.lexingtonbooks.com. (European purchasers may pay in British pounds or euros.) Also available from amazon.com and other US and foreign online booksellers. Hardcover list price: $65. ENDORSEMENTS: "Authors of texts on Marxist economics tend to treat Marx as a distant basis upon which to build their own individual opinions. This al la carte approach stems from . . . acceptance of the supposed errors and internal inconsistency in Marx's theory of value. In contrast, Reclaiming Marx's 'Capital,' by decisively refuting the allegations of error and internal inconsistency, returns Marx's own work to centre stage. [It]is thus an important unifying work, rather than just another divisive personal opinion." -- Nick Potts, Reader in Economics, Southampton Solent University "In Reclaiming Marx's 'Capital,' Kliman's arguments--and it is largely a book of arguments - operate like a buzz saw clearing away the underbrush of misplaced criticisms that have kept the real Capital hidden from most of its potential readers. The project is much needed, and brilliantly and clearly (and for this reader, convincingly) executed. Highly recommended for all those who need Capital (and who doesn't?)." -- Bertell Ollman, Professor of Politics, New York University "It had to be done: someone has finally rescued Marx from the Marxists. If you want to come to grips with the most famous, most profound, and yet most-censored critique of capitalism yet seen; if you want access to the real ideas of the man who famously quipped 'Me, I am not a Marxist'; and most of all, if you don't trust anyone or anything 'til you've checked for yourself--then this is the place to start." --Alan Freeman, Department of Social Sciences, University of Greenwich "[A]lmost everyone, orthodox and Marxian economists alike, [has] accepted the view that Marx's value theory is internally inconsistent. . . .[This book] sorts out a bewildering tangle of approaches and issues in order to demonstrate that the charge of internal inconsistency is false. . . . Reclaiming Marx's 'Capital' is a fresh attempt to get it right, in terms Marx himself would have recognized." --Thomas Jeannot, Professor of Philosophy, Gonzaga University "This is the first comprehensive introduction to all aspects of the transformation 'problem.' It will become the standard reference work in the years to come. No serious work on value theory can afford to ignore it." --Guglielmo Carchedi, Department of Economics and Econometrics, University of Amsterdam (Ret.) From the back cover ------------------- This book seeks to reclaim Capital from the myth of internal inconsistency, a myth that serves to justify the censorship of Marx's critique of political economy and present-day research based upon it. Andrew Kliman shows that the alleged inconsistencies are actually caused by misinterpretation. By modifying the standard interpretation of Marx's value theory in tow simple ways, the recent "temporal single-system interpretation" eliminates all of the alleged inconsistencies. Written especially for the nonspecialist reader in a clear accessible style and with the bare minimum of mathematics, Reclaiming Marx's "Capital" introduces readers to Marx's value theory and contrasting interpretations of it, the history of the internal inconsistency controversy, and interpretive standards and methods. Kliman then surveys Marx's falling-rate-of-profit theory, the relationship of prices to values (the "transformation problem"), Marx's exploitation theory of profit, and other topics. The book ends with a discussion of why the myth of inconsistency persists, and a call to set the record straight. * Read the Table of Contents, Index, and start of Preface at the author's website: http://akliman.squarespace.com/reclaiming * Order book from publisher's website for ONLY $22.91: http://www.lexingtonbooks.com/Catalog/SingleBook.shtml?command=Search&db=^DB/CATALOG.db&eqSKUdata=0739118528 * European customers should use this URL: http://www.lexingtonbooks.com/Catalog/Eur/SingleBook.shtml?command=Search&db=^db/CATALOG.db&eqSKUdata=0739118528ř’
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