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What follows are a few thoughts about precarious labour and Marx’ Capital. They should not be considered exhaustive. I have also simplified Marx’s argument to a large extent. In reading Michael Heinrich’s masterful 2012 Introduction to the Three Volumes of Karl Marx’s Capital, I was struck by his remark that,...

Note: these thoughts are, necessarily, incomplete - they do not, for example, discuss the oppression of women - but I hope they add constructively to the discussion of a difficult, complex, and emotional issue. They are likely inadequate, and in some cases maybe wrong, but they are set down in...

One of the interesting discussions in John Bellamy Foster’s Marx’s Ecology is the discussion of “coevolution”. Foster relates how, due to their study of Darwin and other 19th century scientists, came up with the idea that, just as the internal organs of animals evolved along with changes in their environment,...

Marx’s Ecology: Materialism and Nature, John Bellamy Foster, New York: Monthly Review Press, 2000. Marx’s Ecology fills a gap in Marxist scholarship by, in a sense, taking seriously Marx and Engels’ claim to materialism. Reading 20th century Marxists, it can sometimes seem as if “materialism” is being used metaphorically, or...

In Karl Marx and Critical Librarianship, John Pateman, CEO of Thunder Bay Public Library, seeks to provide a Marxist framework for a “Needs Based” library model. In 2008, Pateman wrote in Information for Social Change on “Developing a Needs Based Library Service” which, while not naming Marx directly, did refer...