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Marx's capital : a student edition / Edited and introduced by C.J. Arthur.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Marx, Karl, 1818-1883.
Contributor:
Arthur, C. J. (Christopher John), 1940-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Marx, Karl, 1818-1883. Kapital.
Marx, Karl.
Capital.
Economics.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (541 p.)
Edition:
Student
Place of Publication:
London : Electric Book Co., c2001.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
The essence of Capital Volume I, with all the footnotes cut out and an introduction by Christopher Arthur.
Contents:
Intro
CONTENTS
Editor's Introduction
Preface to the First German Edition
Afterword to the Second German Edition
PART I: COMMODITIES AND MONEY
Chapter 1 - Commodities
Section 1. The Two Factors of a Commodity: Use-value and Value 36
Section 2. The Two-fold Character of the Labour Embodied in Commodities 42
Section 3. The Form of Value or Exchange-value 49
A. Elementary or Accidental Form of Value 50
B. Total or Expanded Form of Value 64
C. The General Form of Value 67
D. The Money-form 73
Section 4. The Fetishism of Commodities 74
Chapter 2. - Exchange
Chapter 3 - Money, or the Circulation of Commodities
Section 1. The Measure of Values 97
Section 2. The Medium of Circulation 104
Section 3. Money 131
PART II: THE TRANSFORMATION OF MONEY INTO CAPITAL
Chapter 4 - The General Formula for Capital
Chapter 5 - Contradictions in the General Formula of Capital
Chapter 6 - The Buying and Selling of Labour-power
PART III: THE PRODUCTION OF ABSOLUTE SURPLUS-VALUE
Chapter 7-The Labour-process and the Process of Producing Surplus-value
Section 1. The Labour-process 171
Section 2. The Production of Surplus-value 180
Chapter 8 - Constant Capital and Variable Capital
Chapter 9 - The Rate of Surplus-value
Chapter 10 - The Working Day
Section 1. The Limits of the Working Day 216
Section 2. The Greed for Surplus-labour 219
Section 3. Branches of English Industry without Legal Limits to Exploitation 223
Section 4. Day and Night Work. The Relay System 231
Section 5. The Struggle for a Normal Working Day 237
Section 6. The English Factory Acts, 244
Section 7, Reaction of the English Factory Acts on Other Countries 264
Chapter 11 - Rate and Mass of Surplus-value
PART IV: PRODUCTION OF RELATIVE SURPLUS-VALUE.
Chapter 12 - The Concept of Relative Surplus-value
Chapter 13 - Cooperation
Chapter 14- Division of Labour and Manufacture
Section 1. Two-fold Origin of Manufacture 297
Section 2. The Detail Labourer and his Implements 301
Section 3. The Two Fundamental Forms of Manufacture 303
Section 4. Division of Labour in Manufacture, and Division of Labour in Society 312
Section 5. The Capitalistic Character of Manufacture 321
Chapter 15- Machinery and Modern Industry
Section 1. The Development of Machinery 329
Section 2. The Value Transferred by Machinery to the Product 342
Section 3. The Proximate Effects of Machinery on the Workman 349
Section 4. The Factory 372
Section 5. The Strife between Workman and Machine 379
Section 6. The Theory of Compensation 391
Section 7. Repulsion and Attraction of Workpeople by the Factory System. 397
Section 8. Revolution Effected by Modern Industry 403
Section 9. The Factory Acts. 422
Section 10. Modern Industry and Agriculture 434
PART V: THE PRODUCTION OF ABSOLUTE AND OF RELATIVE SURPLUS-VALUE
Chapter 16 - Absolute and Relative Surplus-value
Chapter 17 - Changes in the Price of Labour-power and in Surplus-value
PART VI: WAGES
Chapter 19 - The Transformation of the Value of Labour-power into Wages
Chapter 22 - National Differences in Wages
PART VII: THE ACCUMULATION OF CAPITAL
Chapter 23 - Simple Reproduction
Chapter 24 - Conversion of Surplus-value into Capital
Section 1. Capitalist Production on a Progressively Increasing Scale. 471
Section 3. Separation of Surplus Value into Capital and Revenue 481
Chapter 25 - The General Law of Capitalist Accumulation
Section 1. The Increased Demand for Labour-power that Accompanies Accumulation. 486
Section 2. Relative Diminution of the Variable Part of Capital 492.
Section 3. Progressive Production of an Industrial Reserve Army 501
Section 4.. The General Law of Capitalistic Accumulation 512
PART VIII: THE SO-CALLED PRIMITIVE ACCUMULATION
Chapter 26-The Secret of Primitive Accumulation
Chapter 27 - Expropriation of the Agricultural Population from the Land
Chapter 28 - Bloody Legislation against the Expropriated
Chapter 32 - Historical Tendency of Capitalist Accumulation
absolute surplus-value
170
280
438
abstract labour
39
43
54
61
65
77
94
111
198
abstraction
37
49
53
143
accumulation
471
473
480
481
486
491
501
518
539
agricultural labour
381
397
434
514
524
agriculture
alienation
110
166
384
467
517
appearances
50
59
97
270
281
451
464
Aristotle
86
159
289
360
Arkwright, Richard
331
336
380
Athens
219
Australia 401
Bailey, Samuel 58
barter
91
114
basis (and superstructure) 86
Bastiat, Frederic 86
Bentham, Jeremy 168
Burke, Edmund 287
capital
definition of 143
contradictions of 152
history of 143
history of 524
history of 535
history of 540
and labour 219
and labour 236
and labour 272
and labour 465
and labour 511
and labour 536
relation 470
relation 487
capitalist
149
160
186
218
242
272
294
461
capitalist mode of production
164
433
522
525
540
centralisation (of capital)
496
child labour
224
233
241
254
348
390
407
423
China 336
circulation
of commodities 104
of money 117
of capital 143
of capital 459
class struggle
219.
264
378
clearing of estates 531
collective labour
301
305
309
321
372
commodity
36
88
103
180
163
477
communism
84
community
83
312
318
competition
283
446
498
511
composition (of capital)
organic 393
organic 486
organic 501
technical 486
technical 493
technical 501
value 486
value 493
concentration (of capital)
432
494
concrete labour
45
constant capital
206
210
consumption
176
205
contradiction
104
117
137
152
212
359
428
450
512
cooperation
286
404
corvée
220
453
crises
116
138
402
Cromwell, Oliver 525
dialectic 476
division of labour
297
374
426
education
324
Elizabeth I 525
enclosures 527
England
240
265
361
394
408
508
equality
168
217
equivalent form
52
57
exchange (of commodities)
63
exchange-value
454
exploitation
215
293
350
489
factory
317
398
Factory Acts
244
363
368
417
factory inspectors
248
251
256
262
354
366
family
430
442
female labour
230
413
fetishism 74
Feudalism
523
Fourier, Charles
258
339
France
139
315
537
freedom
Germany
379
Gladstone, William 536
gold (and silver)
73
100
121
126
guilds
298
302.
320
Hegel, G.W.F. 272
hoarding 132
Holland
India
383
individual value
282
357
individuals 482
industrial cycles
401
industrial revolution
instruments of labour
174
181
202
labour
74
197
465
skilled 46
skilled 194
skilled 311
skilled 327
private 63
private 77
market 165
market 239
market 383
market 390
market 470
productive 176
productive 203
productive 438
fund 462
labour time
40
81
108
223
labour-power
161
172
189
236
278
311
411
478
labour-process
274
515
landowners 524
law
economic 80
economic 126
economic 190
economic 270
economic 282
economic 286
economic 444
economic 457
economic 477
economic 482
economic 490
economic 511
economic 517
juridical 88
juridical 257
juridical 351
juridical 535
Luddites 380
machinery
177
327
manufacture 297
means of production
merchants' capital
151
158
middle ages 82
miser
482
money
72
90
92
moral depreciation 356
Nasmyth, James
341
388
nature
179
necessary labour
negation 378
pauperism 515
peasantry
463
political economy
263
455
468
Poor Law 241
population
314
504
price
99
156
449
primitive accumulation 521
private property
526
539.
productivity (of labour).
Notes:
Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
ISBN:
1-281-24077-X
9786611240776
OCLC:
70747658

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