Martin Saar and Bernard E. Harcourt on State Capitalism and Behemoths
Coöperism 8/13 | READINGS
Principal Primary Readings Ernst Fraenkel, The Dual State: A Contribution to the Theory of Dictatorship (1941), p. 171-187. Franz Neumann, Behemoth: The Structure and Practice of National Socialism, 1933–1944 (New York: Octagon Books, 1963). Please read pp. 221-8. This text is… Continue Reading
Peut-on travailler sans hiérarchie ?
Axel Honneth
Professor Honneth is Jack C. Weinstein Professor for the Humanities in the Department of Philosophy at Columbia University; Director of the Institute for Social Research, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main (since 2001); and C4-Professor of Social Philosophy, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Main… Continue Reading
William E. Scheuerman
Bill Scheuerman is the James H. Rudy Professor of Political Science at Indiana University Bloomington. Bill’s primary research and teaching interests are in modern political thought, German political thought, democratic theory, legal theory, and international thought. His most recent books… Continue Reading
Clara Maier
Clara Maier is a political theorist and historian of political thought at Columbia University. She received her PhD from Cambridge University in 2017 and has taught in Cambridge and Berlin before joining Columbia’s political science department. Her current research is focused on legal… Continue Reading
Frieda Ekotto
Frieda Ekotto is the Lorna Goodison Collegiate Professor of Afroamerican and African Studies, Comparative Literature and Francophone Studies at the University of Michigan. As an intellectual historian and philosopher with areas of expertise in 20th and 21st-century Anglophone and Francophone… Continue Reading
Bernard E. Harcourt | Transformation of Cooperation at the MST
By Bernard E. Harcourt I was originally attracted to Brazil’s Landless Workers Movement (MST) because it is one of the largest social movements in Latin America, according to many reports, and places cooperation and forms of cooperative production at the… Continue Reading
Étienne Balibar | “The Expropriators are expropriated” [Full paper]
By Étienne Balibar [1] This is one of Marx’s most celebrated sentences, which is to be found towards the end of Chapter 24 of section 7 in Capital, Volume One (first published in 1867) [ed note: Chapter 32 of section 8… Continue Reading