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On Marxism, pragmatism and critical urban studies

, 2014
This article explores the possibilities of philosophical pragmatism for critical theory in urban studies. It points to the philosophical connections between pragmatism and the mainstay of critical theory in urban studies — Marxism.
G. Bridge
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Marxism and neo-Marxism

2018
Karl Marx said towards the end of his life that he was not a Marxist, thus recognising that a separate body of work had grown up around his work. 'Marxism' has many strands, but the version of it that reached anthropology was an economic interpretation of history that emphasised four central theoretical elements: the physical reality of human life, the
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Black Marxism

The SAGE Handbook of Marxism, 2022
Asad M. Haider
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Marxism and Class Theory: A Bourgeois Critique

, 1980
Foreword by Seymour Topping Introduction: Understanding the Impact of New Media on Journalism Part I: Altering News Content 1. Transforming Storytelling: From Omnidirectional Imaging to Augmented Reality 2.
G. Mackenzie, F. Parkin
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Marxism Versus Post-Marxism

1990
Given the general anti-Marxist climate of the 1980s, among those Marxists who have taken the ‘reductionism versus empiricism’ dilemma seriously, most have rejected the Marxist paradigm in toto, as a theory which — by its very construction — leads to a deterministic, essentialist view of the social world and/or to authoritarian attitudes in politics.
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Urban Marxism and the Post-colonial Question: Henri Lefebvre and ‘Colonisation’*

, 2013
The post-colonial has often functioned as a code word for a form of French post-theory. In more recent efforts to reconstruct linkages between metropolitan Marxism and counter-colonialism, the post-colonial refers to an open-ended research field for ...
Stefan Kipfer, K. Goonewardena
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Marxism and Retribution

1979
Philosophers have written at great length about the moral problems involved in punishing the innocent — particularly as these problems raise obstacles to an acceptance of the moral theory of Utilitarianism. Punishment of an innocent man in order to bring about good social consequences is, at the very least, not always clearly wrong on utilitarian ...
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Marxism, post-Marxism, and the geography of development

2002
Introduction When David Keeble surveyed the literature on economic development in the mid-1960s he had little positive to report on the contributions of geography and geographers. Writing in Models in geography, Keeble complained of an ‘apparent and remarkable lack of interest among geographers in the study of the phenomenon of ...
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Socialism, Marxism, and Neo-Marxism

2011
In order to understand Marxism (which Engels described as scientific socialism) and neo-Marxism, it is first necessary to briefly address earlier visions of socialism. Accordingly I focus on the work of three key utopian socialist thinkers: Henri de Saint-Simon, Charles Fourier, and Robert Owen.
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Chapter Four. Is ‘analytical marxism’ marxism?

2009
This chapter examines what really is left of Marxism in analytical Marxism. It discusses some of this work (especially that of Elster and Roemer) in order to explore the extent to which it can be considered 'Marxist'. The conclusion is that analytical Marxism is not Marxism and that, indeed, it is, in essence, anti-Marxist.
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