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On the occasion of its 60-year anniversary, this conference seeks to revisit the intellectual legacy of Reading Capital, investigating its contemporary relevance, as well as the polemics that have emerged since its publication. We thereby invite papers that critically reflect on this legacy, drawing attention to the limits of the work as well as its unexplored potentials. We would also like to welcome papers that engage with Capital itself, and the various other readings that have become canonised in the intervening decades. Papers will therefore be categorised into the following streams:
1. Reading Capital
This panel invites papers that directly engage with Marx’s Capital project as a critical text, focusing on unresolved problems of interpretation, translations, intellectual histories, lacunae and tensions, and so on.
2. Reading Reading Capital
Readings of Reading Capital itself, attending to thematics raised by one or more of its component texts, the continuity/discontinuity of the project as a whole, the resulting trajectories of its individual authors, or the circumstances of its production and reception histories.
3. Reading readings of Capital
Finally, readings of one or more of the various interpretative traditions to which Capital - and Marx’s wider corpus - have given rise, evaluated in critical relation to structural Marxism. These could include, but are not limited to: Postcolonial and feminist readings, German Critical Theory, the Neue-Marx Lekture, Value-Form Theory, Operaismo and Autonomia Operaia, the ‘State debates’, Legal Form Theory, Political Marxism, Social Reproduction Theory.
We are currently accepting abstracts for papers that are no longer than 15 minutes in length (1950-2250 words). Presenters must be either currently pursuing a PhD or enrolled in an equivalent intensive research program. If you are interested in presenting, please email an abstract (max 300 words) and a brief personal bio to crmepgrad...@gmail.com by March 15th. We look forward to reading your submissions!
Plenary Speakers
Peter Hallward (CRMEP); Svenja Bromberg (Goldsmiths)
Disclaimer: this event is organised by the PhD students at the now independent institution, Centre for Research in Modern European Philosophy.
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