History and Human Existence

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  INTRODUCTION:  MARXISM AND THE SENSE OF SUBJECTIVITY

 collapse sectionPART ONE—  MARX
 collapse section1—  Marx's Hopes for Individuation
 The Individual in the Bourgeois State
 The Alienation of Labor
 Individual and Species:  Man as Social Being
 A Vision of Free Individuality
 Reality Depicted
 Egoism
 The Logic of Capital and the Loss of Agency
 History and Individuation
 The Social Individual Liberated
 expand section2—  The "Real Individual" and Marx's Method
 expand section3—  Marx's Concept of Labor
 expand section4—  Reason, Interest, and the Necessity of History:  The Ambiguities of Marx's Legacy

 collapse sectionPART TWO—  FROM ENGELS TO GRAMSCI
 expand section5—  Engels and the Dialectics of Nature
 expand section6—  The Rise of Orthodox Marxism
 expand section7—  Revolutionary Rationalism:  Luxemburg, Lukács, and Gramsci

 collapse sectionPART THREE—  EXISTENTIAL MARXISM
 expand section8—  The Prospects for Individuation Reconsidered
 expand section9—  Sartre:  The Fear of Freedom
 expand section10—  Merleau-Ponty:  The Ambiguity of History
  EPILOGUE

 expand sectionNotes
 expand sectionBIBLIOGRAPHY
 expand sectionINDEX

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