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  1. Coercion or Privatization? Crisis and Planned Economies in the Debates of the Early Frankfurt School.Claudio Corradetti - 2024 - Jus Cogens 6 (1):7-28.
    The 1930s–1940s underwent profound structural economic and political turmoil following the collapse of the nineteenth century liberal market economies. The intellectual debates of the time were dominated by the question of whether Marx’s theory of the tendency of rate of profit to fall was true, or what consequence could be imagined in the survival of capitalist societies. Placed in the middle of such debates was also the reorganization of national productions into war economies. By means of reconstructive analysis, the paper (...)
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  • The controversy over Friedrich Pollock’s state capitalism.Manfred Gangl - 2016 - History of the Human Sciences 29 (2):23-41.
    The critique of capitalism is the bedrock on which rests the reputation of Frankfurt School critical theory. Though critical theory has often been heralded – or criticized and rejected – as a reformulation of Marxian theory for our times, its relation with the critique of political economy, and in particular the economic treatises, has barely been studied. Friedrich Pollock, who was Max Horkheimer’s lifelong friend and close associate at the Institute for Social Research, was responsible for all administrative and financial (...)
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  • Critical pessimism and the limits of traditional Marxism.Moishe Postone & Barbara Brick - 1982 - Theory and Society 11 (5):617-658.
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  • Marxist criticism of Soviet-type society in Czechoslovakia: The political thought of Egon Bondy after 1968.Petr Kužel - 2020 - Thesis Eleven 159 (1):78-95.
    This paper focuses on the development of the political thought of Czech Marxist philosopher Egon Bondy. It examines his criticism of state socialism in the Eastern Block from a Marxist perspective, and it outlines the development of his analysis. The study covers the period from the late 1960s until the Velvet Revolution in 1989, a period during which Bondy explored the historical constitution and nature of a ‘new ruling class’ in the USSR, as well as deeper trends of convergence between (...)
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