A Contemporary History of Marx's Capital: The Inexhaustible and the Unfinished

Paolo Favilli provides both students and scholars with an original reading of themes and issues found in Karl Marx’s Das Kapital and its connections with present-day challenges. By way of continuous cross-referencing between present and past, Favilli demonstrates claims that the scientific status of Das Kapital, advanced by countless texts since its original publication, are themselves deeply imbued by the “spirit of the times.” If in 1963 Jean-Paul Sartre could write that Marxism was the unsurpassable philosophical horizon of our times, what could make an undergraduate student today consider such a claim plausible?

Informed by the latest research on Marxist theory and decades teaching the Philosophy of History, Favilli employs a didactic approach stimulating student engagement and learning opportunities in the classroom. This approach allows for a better understanding of relationship between the present and the multiple temporalities that characterise and periodise the contemporary era. What follows is a critique of the contemporary academy for its hangover of post-1989 nuovismo (cult of novelty) and inability to make the proper distinctions between Marxism-as-party-state, the works of Karl Marx, and Marxism as an object of history. This led to the spectacle where after 1989, those who had spent most of their careers as Marxist-hued scholars not only abandoned this identity but also spurned any recognition that Marx and Marxism were worthwhile objects of inquiry.

This book was first published in Italian as A proposito de ‘Il capitale’..., Il lungo presente e I miei studenti. Corso di storia contemporanea (Milan: FrancoAngeli, 2021). This English translation includes a new foreword by the author.

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A Contemporary History of Marx's Capital: The Inexhaustible and the Unfinished

Paolo Favilli provides both students and scholars with an original reading of themes and issues found in Karl Marx’s Das Kapital and its connections with present-day challenges. By way of continuous cross-referencing between present and past, Favilli demonstrates claims that the scientific status of Das Kapital, advanced by countless texts since its original publication, are themselves deeply imbued by the “spirit of the times.” If in 1963 Jean-Paul Sartre could write that Marxism was the unsurpassable philosophical horizon of our times, what could make an undergraduate student today consider such a claim plausible?

Informed by the latest research on Marxist theory and decades teaching the Philosophy of History, Favilli employs a didactic approach stimulating student engagement and learning opportunities in the classroom. This approach allows for a better understanding of relationship between the present and the multiple temporalities that characterise and periodise the contemporary era. What follows is a critique of the contemporary academy for its hangover of post-1989 nuovismo (cult of novelty) and inability to make the proper distinctions between Marxism-as-party-state, the works of Karl Marx, and Marxism as an object of history. This led to the spectacle where after 1989, those who had spent most of their careers as Marxist-hued scholars not only abandoned this identity but also spurned any recognition that Marx and Marxism were worthwhile objects of inquiry.

This book was first published in Italian as A proposito de ‘Il capitale’..., Il lungo presente e I miei studenti. Corso di storia contemporanea (Milan: FrancoAngeli, 2021). This English translation includes a new foreword by the author.

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A Contemporary History of Marx's Capital: The Inexhaustible and the Unfinished

A Contemporary History of Marx's Capital: The Inexhaustible and the Unfinished

by Paolo Favilli
A Contemporary History of Marx's Capital: The Inexhaustible and the Unfinished

A Contemporary History of Marx's Capital: The Inexhaustible and the Unfinished

by Paolo Favilli

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Overview

Paolo Favilli provides both students and scholars with an original reading of themes and issues found in Karl Marx’s Das Kapital and its connections with present-day challenges. By way of continuous cross-referencing between present and past, Favilli demonstrates claims that the scientific status of Das Kapital, advanced by countless texts since its original publication, are themselves deeply imbued by the “spirit of the times.” If in 1963 Jean-Paul Sartre could write that Marxism was the unsurpassable philosophical horizon of our times, what could make an undergraduate student today consider such a claim plausible?

Informed by the latest research on Marxist theory and decades teaching the Philosophy of History, Favilli employs a didactic approach stimulating student engagement and learning opportunities in the classroom. This approach allows for a better understanding of relationship between the present and the multiple temporalities that characterise and periodise the contemporary era. What follows is a critique of the contemporary academy for its hangover of post-1989 nuovismo (cult of novelty) and inability to make the proper distinctions between Marxism-as-party-state, the works of Karl Marx, and Marxism as an object of history. This led to the spectacle where after 1989, those who had spent most of their careers as Marxist-hued scholars not only abandoned this identity but also spurned any recognition that Marx and Marxism were worthwhile objects of inquiry.

This book was first published in Italian as A proposito de ‘Il capitale’..., Il lungo presente e I miei studenti. Corso di storia contemporanea (Milan: FrancoAngeli, 2021). This English translation includes a new foreword by the author.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781040414897
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 09/03/2025
Series: Marx and Marxisms
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 368

About the Author

Paolo Favilli is retired Professor of Contemporary History and Theory of Historical Research at Genoa University, Italy, where he is also former Director of the Department of Humanistic Studies. His main research focus is the history of Marxism, to which he has devoted numerous essays and volumes, including Il socialismo italiano e la teoria economica di Marx (1892-1902) (1980), Herausgabe und Verbreitung del Werke von Karl Marx und Friedrich Engels in Italien (1988), Storia del marxismo italiano. Dalle origini alla grande guerra (1996), Marxismo e storia. Saggio sull'innovazione storiografica in Italia (2006), Il marxismo e le sue storie (2016) and A proposito de ‘Il capitale’..., Il lungo presente e I miei studenti. Corso di storia contemporanea (2021).

Table of Contents

Foreword. 1. For an Introduction. The Sense of a ‘Contemporary History’ Course Reflecting on Karl Marx’s Capital 2. Capital as a ‘material’ object 3. Capital and its Economic Knowledge 4. The Non-Economic (?) Knowledges of Capital 5. History: A Further ‘Non-Economic Knowledge’ in Capital? 6. Our Everyday Alienation and Surplus Value 7. For a Conclusion. Capital, Capitalism, And Contemporary History

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