Marx after Heidegger

aut.relation.endpage58
aut.relation.issue1 & 2
aut.relation.pages13
aut.relation.startpage45
aut.relation.volume32
aut.researcherJackson, Mark Laurence
dc.contributor.authorJackson, ML
dc.date.accessioned2014-12-11T02:19:11Z
dc.date.available2014-12-11T02:19:11Z
dc.date.copyright2013
dc.date.issued2013
dc.description.abstractIn the ten years between the publication of The Savage Anomaly (1981/1991b) and Insurgencies (1992/1999), the Italian political philosopher Antonio Negri substantially defined a contemporary theory of power and the State that presents the crisis of democracy as a crisis of the absolute subject in relation to constitutionalism, that which limits democracy and absolute government. From a Spinozist thinking of power as pure immanence, Negri, in Insurgencies, develops a political philosophy around two competing notions: constituent power and constituted power where the former is thought as an incessant transformative ontology of being and the latter as the relative stasis that structures threshold conditions for transformation. In discussing such transformative ontology, Negri emphasises the temporality of constituent power as an ontology of the event, and compares directly the ontological understandings of time of Marx and of Heidegger, assaying them as diametrically opposed. While this essay begins with a critical engagement with the “absolute” of Negri’s Spinoza in order to open a space of encounter for Negri, of Marx and Heidegger, its aim is not so much to articulate a philosophical understanding of time but rather to argue for a radical engagement with Heidegger within the legacies of Spinoza and Marx.
dc.identifier.citationACCESS: Critical Perspectives on Communication, Cultural & Policy Studies, Vol. 32, No. 1/2, Dec 2013: 45-58
dc.identifier.issn0111-8889
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10292/8223
dc.publisherRMIT University, School of Art
dc.relation.urihttp://search.informit.com.au/documentSummary;dn=756389390804585;res=IELHSS
dc.rightsAuthors retain the right to place his/her publication version of the work on a personal website or institutional repository for non commercial purposes. The definitive version was published in (see Citation). The original publication is available at (see Publisher’s Version).
dc.rights.accessrightsOpenAccess
dc.titleMarx after Heidegger
dc.typeJournal Article
pubs.elements-id176304
pubs.organisational-data/AUT
pubs.organisational-data/AUT/Design & Creative Technologies
pubs.organisational-data/AUT/Design & Creative Technologies/School of Arts & Design
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