The term political Marxism itself was coined during the Brenner debate of the late 1970s as a criticism of the work of Brenner by the French Marxist historianGuy Bois. Bois distinguished Brenner's "political Marxism" from "economic Marxism".[3] As such, the label political Marxism has not always been accepted by the scholars to whom it has been applied.[4][5] The term is also distinguished from Marxism in the politically activist sense. According to Arnold Hauser, in this system of analysis, one can agree with Marxism as a philosophy of history and society without being a Marxist.[6]
Researchers linked with political Marxism today include Benno Teschke,[8] Hannes Lacher,[9] and George Comninel.[10]
References
^Leavy, Patricia (2020). The Oxford Handbook of Qualitative Research. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 71. ISBN978-0-19-084738-8.
^Das, Raju J. (2017). Marxist Class Theory for a Skeptical World. Leiden: BRILL. p. 18. ISBN978-90-04-29709-8.
^'Against the Neo-Malthusian Orthodoxy', in The Brenner Debate: Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe, ed. by Trevor Aston and C.H.E. Philpin, Past and Present Publications (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985), pp. 107–18 (pp. 115–16) [repr. from Past & Present, 79 (1978), pp. 60-69]. 'Brenner's Marxism is "political Marxism"—in reaction to the wave of economistic tendencies in contemporary historiography. As the role of the class struggle is widely underestimated, so he injects strong doses of it into his own historical interpretation. I do not question the motivation behind such a reaction, but rather the summary and purely ideological manner in which it is implemented. It amounts to a voluntarist vision of history in which the class struggle is divorced from all other objective contingencies and, in the first place, from such laws of development as may be peculiar to a specific mode of production.
^Dixon, Rebecca (1982). Choice: Publication of the Association of College and Research Libraries, a Division of the American Library Association. Middletown, CT: American Library Association. p. 571.
(1995 [1982]) 'The Agrarian Roots of European Capitalism' in Aston, T.H. and C.H.E. Philpin (eds.) The Brenner Debate: Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 213-327. Originally published (1982). ’The Agrarian Roots of European Capitalism’, Past & Present, 97, November, pp. 16-113.