| History and Human Existence |
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
| INTRODUCTION: MARXISM AND THE SENSE OF SUBJECTIVITY |
| PART ONE— MARX |
| 1— Marx's Hopes for Individuation |
| 2— The "Real Individual" and Marx's Method |
| 3— Marx's Concept of Labor |
| 4— Reason, Interest, and the Necessity of History: The Ambiguities of Marx's Legacy |
| PART TWO— FROM ENGELS TO GRAMSCI |
| 5— Engels and the Dialectics of Nature |
| 6— The Rise of Orthodox Marxism |
| 7— Revolutionary Rationalism: Luxemburg, Lukács, and Gramsci |
| PART THREE— EXISTENTIAL MARXISM |
| 8— The Prospects for Individuation Reconsidered |
| 9— Sartre: The Fear of Freedom |
| • | Freedom as Foundation and Problem |
| • | Authenticity and Man's Social Situation |
| • | Revolution and Transcendence |
| • | The Will to Revolution |
| • | In Praise of Leninism |
| • | Existentialism and Marxism |
| • | The Phenomenology of the Social World and the Problem of "the Other" |
| • | Human Collectivities: From the Group to the Series |
| • | The Phenomenon of Social Necessity |
| • | A Formal Marxism? |
| • | The Limits of Sartrean Marxism |
| • | Marxism and the Critique of Rationalism |
| • | Existential Psychoanalysis and the Aims of Marxism |
| 10— Merleau-Ponty: The Ambiguity of History |
| EPILOGUE |
| Notes |
| BIBLIOGRAPHY |
| INDEX |