Grounding Critique : Marxism, Concept Formation, and Embodied Social Relations /

Grounding Critique: Marxism, Concept Formation, and Embodied Social Relations argues that marxism must have a robust understanding of embodied social relations, such as race, gender, and sexuality, in order to produce the knowledge necessary for transformative social change. Tanyildiz subjects two i...

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Main Author: Tanyildiz, Gökbörü Sarp (Author)

Format: eBook

Language: English

Published: Leiden ; Boston : Brill, 2025.

Series: Social Sciences E-Books Online, Collection 2025.
Studies in Critical Social Sciences ; 302.

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Call Number: GA401

Table of Contents:
  • Foreword
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction: The Living Individual and the Marionette
  • i The Predicament of the Marxist Sociologist
  • ii A Marxism Made to the Measure of Life
  • iii The Principle of Sociability for Social Relations
  • iv The Specificity of Social Relations in Marx
  • v Embodied Social Relations under Capitalism
  • vi Embodied Social Relations in Contemporary Marxist Social Thought
  • vii A Brief Note on Intersectionality
  • viii A Marxist-Feminist Symposium on Intersectionality
  • ix Embodied Social Relations in Social Reproduction Theory
  • x A Conceptual Ground Clearing to Return to Marx
  • part i 
  • Embodied Social Relations in Contemporary Marxist-Feminism
  • i Introduction
  • ii Intersectionality
  • iii Some Methodological Propositions for a Marxist Engagement with Intersectionality
  • iv The Generalization of Embodied Social Relations as the Categories of Subjective Human Life
  • v The Framing of the Marxist-Feminist Engagement with Intersectionality
  • vi The Analytic Primacy of Class and the Transformative Pedagogies
  • vii The Ideological Techniques of Bourgeois Management
  • viii The Concept of the Mode of Production
  • ix The Methodological Tension between the Phenomenology and Ontology of the Social
  • x The Need for the Recovery of the Concept of Experience in its Lived Sense
  • xi Embodied Social Relations and the Levels of Analysis in Social Sciences
  • xii Class Burdened with the Difficult Conceptual Task of Reconciling History with the Social
  • xiii Mistaking Critical Marxist Epistemologies for a Sociology of Knowledge
  • xiv A Quasi-transcendental Framework of Explanation Premised upon a First Principle
  • xv Marxism and the Non-identity of the Law and Life in Contemporary Capitalist Societies
  • xvi Supra-racial Epistemology of an Aleatory and Subjectless Conception of History
  • xvii Marxist-Feminist Aporetic of Description versus Explanation
  • xviii 10 + 1 Theses on Feuerbach
  • xix The Non-coincidence of Experience and Explanation
  • xx Marxist-Feminist Inscription of the Binary of the Idiographic versus the Nomothetic
  • xxi Why 'Race' Cannot Be Accommodated within a Marxist-Feminist Analysis as an Embodied Social Relation?
  • xxii Conclusion
  • part ii
  • Embodied Social Relations in Social Reproduction Theory
  • i Introduction
  • ii What Is the Relationship between Social Reproduction Theory and Intersectionality?
  • iii Social Reproduction Theory's Ambiguous and Inadequately Self-reflexive Relationship to Intersectionality
  • iv Social Reproduction Theory as a Marxist-Feminist Alternative to Intersectionality
  • v Social Reproduction Theory's 'Methodology' and its Articulation and Selection of Social Problems
  • vi 'Race,' Racialization, and Experience in Social Reproduction Feminism
  • vii Vacillating between Supplementing and Supplanting Intersectionality
  • viii Inauguration of Socialist-Feminist Political Economy as a Unitary Social Theory
  • ix One-Sidedness of Experience in Social Reproduction Theory
  • x The Values, Facts, and Factuality of Oppression in the Quasi-transcendental Structure of Social Reproduction Theory
  • xi Social Reproduction Theory as Sublated Intersectionality
  • xii Metaphorizing Concepts, Criticizing Metaphors
  • xiii (Hegelian-Marxist) Totality in Social Reproduction Theory?
  • xiv Severing Methodology from the Rest of the Theoretical Framework in Social Reproduction Theory
  • xv Co-constitutivity in Social Reproduction Theory
  • xvi 'Additive Method,' Anti-additivity, and Social Reproduction Theory
  • xvii Liberalism, Ontological Atomism, Social Newtonianism, and Intersectionality According to Social Reproduction Theory
  • xviii An Alternative Outlook on the Relationship between Intersectionality and the Critical Import of Newton's System into Liberal Bourgeois Social Thought
  • xix The Pitfalls of the 'Methodology' of Analogical Argumentations and Battling Metaphors
  • xx Towards a Marxist Social Theory of Embodied Social Relations
  • Coda: A Long Day's Evening
  • i A Critique of Concept Formation
  • ii Through Intersectionality to Concept Formation in Contemporary Marxist Social Thought
  • iii Dissolving Intersecting Lines in Favour of Parallel Planes Bereft of Social Existence and Life
  • iv Conceptual Conditions of Dialectically Overcoming Intersectionality
  • v The Finality of Conceptual Judgement?
  • vi Tarrying with Marxist-Feminism and Social Reproduction Theory
  • vii Quo Vadis Social Reproduction?
  • viii Social Reproduction Qua Method
  • ix Returning to Marx to Study Embodied Social Relations
  • Afterword
  • Bibliography
  • Index.