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The People's Science

The People's Science

The People's Science

The Popular Political Economy of Exploitation and Crisis 1816–34
Noel W. Thompson
August 2002
Available
Paperback
9780521893428

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    The work details the emergence, in the post-Napoleonic War period, of a growing popular interest in the critical potentialities of political economy. It considers why this occurred and discusses how the conceptual and analytical tools of political economy were utilised to formulate a critique of early industrial capitalism. The book examines the theories of labour exploitation and capitalist crisis which represented the essence of that critique both as they were elaborated by early-nineteenth-century British anti-capitalist and socialist writers and as they were popularised by writers in the working-class press of the period 1816–34. The book argues that by 1834 in consequence of the efforts of writers such as Hodgskin, Thompson, Gray, Owen and their popularisers the foundations of a distinctively anti-capitalist and socialist political economy had been established and widely disseminated. But these foundations were theoretically flawed. They were flawed by an overconcentration on the sphere of exchange which derived from a particular conception of the determination of exchange value under capitalism; an overconcentration which led on to the suggestion of remedies for the problem of working-class poverty and distress which were necessarily doomed to failure.

    Product details

    August 2002
    Paperback
    9780521893428
    264 pages
    228 × 153 × 18 mm
    0.44kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Preface
    • Introduction
    • 1. Changing attitudes to political economy in the working-class press 1816–34
    • 2. The need for a working-class political economy
    • 3. Charles Hall and Robert Owen: anti-capitalist and socialist political economy before the Ricardian socialists
    • 4. Ricardian socialists/Smithian socialists: what's in a name?
    • 5. The theory of labour exploitation and the working-class press 1816–30
    • 6. The theory of labour exploitation and the working-class press 1830–34
    • 7. Early socialist political economy and the theory of capitalist crisis
    • 8. The popular political economy of crisis 1816–34
    • Conclusion
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Author
    • Noel W. Thompson