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ISBN:
0-85345-983-5
$16.00 paper
ISBN:
0-85345-985-1
$48.00 cloth
224 pp.
also by
Ellen Meiksins
Wood:
THE ORIGIN
OF CAPITALISM
also by
John Bellamy
Foster:
MARX'S ECOLOGY
THE VULNERABLE
PLANET
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New and Expanded Essays
from a Special Issue of Monthly Review
IN DEFENSE OF HISTORY
Marxism and the Postmodern Agenda
edited by
Ellen Meiksins Wood
and John Bellamy Foster
“A hard-hitting critique... In
Defense of Historybrings together fine essays that speak directly to the
underlying assumptions of postmoderism and offer a stunning critique of its
usefulness in both understanding and critiquing the current historical
epoch.”
— CONTEMPORARY SOCIOLOGY
“We live in an era that has made
In Defense of History indispensable; an era that has delegitimized the
practice of sifting through the past for clues about the present in a bid to
improve the future.... It deserves an audience of old believers and young
skeptics alike.”
— SCIENCE AND SOCIETY
Are we now in an age of "postmodernity"?
Even as some on the right have proclaimed the "end of history" or the
final triumph of capitalism, we are told by some left intellectuals that the
"modern" epoch has ended, that the "Enlightenment project"
is dead, that all the old verities and ideologies have lost their relevance,
that the old principles of rationality no longer apply, and so on. Yet what is
striking about the current diagnosis of postmodernity is that it has so much in
common with older pronouncements of death, both radical and reactionary
versions. What has ended, apparently, is not so much another, different epoch
but the same one all over again.
In response, the best of today's new intellectuals
on the left are returning to historical materialism, to class analysis. This
collection reflects that move, pinning postmodernism in its place and time. It
exposes the erroneous bases of "pomo" premises, by identifying the
real problems to which the current intellectual fashions offer false or no
solutions. In doing so, the contributors challenge the limits imposed on action
and resistance by those who see liberating "new times" in the
contradictions of contemporary capitalism. What is being celebrated in the
postmodern agenda, argues Ellen Meiksins Wood, is the prosperity of the
consumerist 1960s reflected in a distorting mirror. The instability and
economic polarization of the 1990s demand a solid critique of the conditions of
capitalism, not endless reexaminations of their "meanings" this is
the standard and goal of In Defense of History.
Contents & Contributors
PART 1: INTRODUCTION
WHAT IS THE POSTMODERN AGENDA?
Ellen Meiksins Wood
PART 2: POSTMODERNISM AND INTELLECTUALS
WHERE DO POSTMODERNISTS COME FROM?
Terry Eagleton
LANGUAGE, HISTORY, AND CLASS STRUGGLE
David McNally
THE POLITICS OF CULTURAL STUDIES
Francis Mulhern
CULTURE, NATIONALISM, AND THE ROLE OF INTELLECTUALS
Aijaz Ahmad Interviewed I
OLD POSITIONS/NEW NECESSITIES: HISTORY, CLASS,
AND MARXIST METANARRATIVE
Bryan D. Palmer
AGAINST SOCIAL DE(CON)STRUCTION OF SCIENCE:
CAUTIONARY TALES FROM THE THIRD WORLD
Meera Nanda
PART 3: POSTMODERNISM AND MOVEMENTS
ISSUES OF CLASS AND CULTURE
Aijaz Ahmad Interviewed II
THE MIRROR OF RACE: POSTMODERNISM
AND THE CELEBRATION OF DIFFERENCE
Kenan Malik
POSTMODERNISM, FEMINISM, AND MARX:
NOTES FROM THE ABYSS
Carol A. Stabile
MARX AND THE ENVIRONMENT
John Bellamy Foster
NORTHERN INTELLECTUALS AND THE EZLN
Daniel Nugent
FIVE THESES ON ACTUALLY EXISTING MARXISM
Fredric Jameson
PART 5: AFTERWORD
IN DEFENSE OF HISTORY
John Bellamy Foster
About the Editors
ELLEN MEIKSINS WOOD is the author
of numerous books including The Retreat from Class (1986, winner of
the Isaac Deutscher Memorial Prize), The Origin of
Capitalism (1999) The Pristine Culture of Capitalism (1991),
and Democracy Against Capitalism (1995), co-author with Neal Wood of
A Trumpet of Sedition (1997), and co-editor of In Defense of
History (1997), and Rising from the Ashes?: Labor
in the Age of "Global" Capitalism (1999).
JOHN BELLAMY FOSTER is
professor of sociology at the University of Oregon. He is the author of
The Vulnerable Planet (1999) and
Marx's Ecology (2000) and co-editor of In
Defense of History (1996).
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