This volume, originally published in French under the title Que faire du Capital?, offers a new interpretation of Marxâs great work. It shows how the novelty and lasting interest of Marxâs theory arises from the fact that, as against the project of a âpureâ economics, it is formulated in concepts that have simultaneously an economic and a political aspect, neither of these being separable from the other.
Jacques Bidet conducts an unprecedented investigation of Marxâs work in the spirit of the history of science, exploring it as a process of theoretical development. Traditional exegesis reads the successive drafts of Capital as if they were complementary and mutually illuminated one another. In actual fact, like any scientist, Marx only wrote a new version in order to correct the previous one. He started from ideas borrowed from Ricardo and Hegel, and between one draft and the next it is possible to see these being eliminated and restructured. This labour, moreover, was never fully completed.
The author thus re-assesses Marxâs entire system in its set of constitutive categories: value, market, labour-power, classes, working class, exploitation, production, fetishism, ideology. He seeks to pin down the difficulties that these encountered, and the analytical and critical value they still have today.
Bidet attaches the greatest importance to Marxâs order of exposition, which assigns each concept its place in the overall system, and makes the validity of the construction depend on the pertinence of its initial presuppositions. This is particularly the case with the relationship between market mechanism and capitalism â and thus also between the market and socialism.
This books an English translation of Jacques Bidet, Que faire du capital? Philosophie, economie et politique dans "La Capital" de Marx, published y Presses Universitaires de France, Paris, 2000.
Foreword to the English Translation of Jacques Bidetâs Que faire du âCapitalâ? by Alex Callinicos
Authorâs Preface to the English Edition
Introduction
Chapter 1. Preliminary Methodological Remarks
1. Pathways: 1857 to 1875
2. The history of science perspective
3. The perspective of reconstruction of the system
Chapter 2. Value as Quantity
1. Constructing a homogeneous economic space: a Marxian project that breaks with political economy
2. Paralogisms of Marx the measurer
3. Capital: the categories of measurement undermine the theorisation of the substance to be measured
4. In what sense does more productive labour produce more value? The articulation of structure and dynamic
5. Skilled labour as a zone of paralogism
6. Intensity: closure and fracture of the quantitative space
Conclusion
Chapter 3. Value as Socio-Political Concept
1. Value as expenditure
2. âTransformation of expenditure into consumption of labour-powerâ
3. Money and labour-value constitute one and the same point of rupture between Marx and Ricardo
4. Value and capital as semi-concepts
5. Value and socialisation of labour: Marxâs inconsistent socialism
6. Labour-value and the state
Conclusion
Chapter 4. Value and price of labour-power
1. A non-normative problematic of the norm
2. Movements of value and movements of price
3. The non-functionalist character of the system: its âopennessâ
4. A hierarchy of values of labour-power?
Conclusion
Chapter 5. Relations of production and class relations
1. Productive and unproductive labour
2. Production and social classes
Conclusion
Chapter 6. The Start of the Exposition and its Development
1. The question of the initial moment of Capital
2. The âtransition to capitalâ
Conclusion
Chapter 7. The Method of Exposition and the Hegelian Heritage
1. On the method of exposition of Capital
2. Hegel, an epistemological support/obstacle
Conclusion
Chapter 8. The Theorisation of the Ideological in Capital
1. The place of everyday consciousness: Volume 3
2. The uncertainties in Marxâs exposition
3. The âraisons dâêtreâ of the form of appearance (in Volume One)
Conclusion
Chapter 9. The Theory of the Value-Form
1. Why the historical or logico-historical interpretation cannot be relevant
2. The notion of form or expression of value, as distinct from the notion of relative value
3. Epistemological history of Chapter 1, section 3
4. What dialectic of the form of value?
5. The expression of value âin use-valueâ
6. Fetishism, a structural category of the ideology of commodity production
Conclusion
Chapter 10. The Economy in General and Historical Materialism
1. The various generalities that Capital presupposes
2. Labour value in pure economics and in historical materialism
Conclusion
General Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
Students, specialists or those interested in reading on Marx's Capital; his philosophical, economic or sociological interpretation; and his political system.