Crack Capitalism Explained

Crack Capitalism
Author:John Holloway
Country:United States
Language:English
Publisher:Pluto Press
BUAP
Release Date:May 2010
Isbn:9780745330082

Crack Capitalism (2010) is a book by sociologist John Holloway that carries on with the political ideas developed in his earlier Change the World Without Taking Power. Holloway sees the problem of political activism, in terms of those struggling “in-and-against” the system, as one of continuing to perpetuate capitalism through their commitment to abstract labour. Holloway defines "abstract labour" as labour which is subordinated exclusively to the demands of the market.

He argues that from the Marxist stand-point of “two-fold nature of labour” or abstract labour and concrete labour, that anti-capitalist struggles should be about concrete doing being against labour, and not a struggle of labour against capital. In this respect it is critical of Leninism, orthodox Marxism and other attempts to address social change either exclusively in terms of socialising the means of production, through the formation of political parties or working within state structures.

The books name is derived from the analogy of ice breaking from struggles against capitalism. It sets out 33 theses which also touch upon dialectics, primitive accumulation, sexual dimorphisation and struggles in the global south.

The book was published by Pluto Press in 2010.[1]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Pluto Press - Search Results . 2013-05-18 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130424043510/http://www.plutobooks.com/display.asp?K=9780745330082& . 2013-04-24 . dead .