Marxism and America: New Appraisals
Marxism and America: New Appraisals
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Abstract
In Marxism and America: New appraisals, an accomplished group of scholars reconsiders the relationship of the history, political culture, and political economy of the United States to the theoretical tradition derived from Karl Marx. A dozen essays (an introduction and eleven chapters) offer fresh considerations arcing from the nineteenth century, when Marx wrote for American newspapers, to the present, when a millennial socialism has emerged inspired by the campaigns of Bernie Sanders and Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. Contributors take up topics ranging from memory of the Civil War to feminist debates over sexuality and pornography. Along the way, they clarify the relationship of race and democracy, the promise and perils of the American political tradition, and the prospects for class politics in the twenty-first century. Marxism and America sheds new light on old questions, helping to explain why socialism has been so difficult to establish in the United States even as it has exerted a notable influence in American thought.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: the Marx–America dialectic
Christopher Phelps andRobin Vandome
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1
The blue and the gray and the red: Marxism and Civil War memory
Matthew E. Stanley
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2
“What is the correct revolutionary proletarian attitude toward sex?”: red love and the Americanization of Marx in the interwar years
Jesse F. Battan
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3
Marxism and Americanism: A. J. Muste, Louis Budenz, and an “American approach” before the Popular Front
Leilah Danielson
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4
Women, the family, and sexuality in U.S. Communist Party publications: refashioning Marxism for the Popular Front era
Jodie Collins
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5
Rethinking Karl Marx: American liberalism from the New Deal to the Cold War
Andrew Hartman
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6
Black Marxism off the color line: W. E. B. Du Bois and Oliver Cromwell Cox as democratic theorists
Paul M. Heideman
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7
“Not picketing in front of bra factories”: Marxism, feminism, and the Weather Underground
Sinead McEneaney
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8
A people’s history of Howard Zinn: radical popular history and its readers
Nick Witham
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9
Class, commodity, consumption: theorizing sexual violence during the feminist sex wars of the 1980s
Mara Keire
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10
Will the revolution be podcast? Marxism and the culture of “millennial socialism” in the United States
Tim Jelfs
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11
Does the American experience refute Marxism?
Kim Moody
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End Matter
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