MARCH/APRIL 2013 l DOLLARS & sense l 7
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Thought and Devotion
A Tribute to Stephen A. Resnick
BY R I C K WOLFF
Stephen A. Resnick was a leading
American Marxian economist for
over four decades—from the 1960s,
when the struggle against the Vietnam
War brought him to Marxism, until his
death this January. His parents were
Boston retail-trade workers whose son
showed exceptional aptitude for reading
and thinking. That took him to the
Wharton School at Pennsylvania and on
to MIT for his economics Ph.D., studying
in the 1960s with future Nobel laureates
Paul Samuelson and Robert Solow. His
first job out of graduate school was as
an assistant professor at Yale, where I
met him as a grad student in his class.
Steve was thus launched on the pampered
elite track for docile exponents of
mainstream economics, at that time a
tense “synthesis” of neoclassical microeconomics
and Keynesian macro.
Young people from below, myself included,
were allowed—a few at a
time—onto such tracks.
How troubling to the profession,
then, when so many of us left that mainstream,
having found it polluted by its
uncritical subservience to the capitalist
status quo. Many of us formed the
Union for Radical Political Economics
(URPE) to break from the mainstream
American Economics Association (AEA).
Some of us engaged the most serious
and best-developed of the alternatives
to both neoclassical and Keynesian economic
paradigms: Marxism. Steve thus
redirected his twin passions of economic
theory and econometrics toward the
goals of social change and mastery of
Marxian economics.
Yale responded to this shift predictably—
by blocking Steve’s promotion
beyond associate professor. So, in
1971, he joined me at the City College
of New York. Its new chairman, Alf
Conrad, recently decamped from the
Harvard Business School, was building
a strong Marxian section of the economics
department. There we taught
the first semesters of “open admissions,”
that wonderful moment when
New York’s children all became eligible
for a free college education: testimony
to New York’s working-class struggles
and victories.
But then UMass-Amherst made
Steve and me (and Sam Bowles, Herb
Gintis, and Rick Edwards) an offer we
could not refuse. We all took positions
there in 1973. Steve and I focused
on developing a Marxian component
of the curriculum, both
undergraduate and graduate. From
the mid-1970s to 2010, Marxian economics
was a major concentration
available to interested students from
the United States and around the
world. What UMass achieved then
was a key contribution to this striking
result: more Marxian economists
are teaching in U.S. colleges and universities
today than ever before.
Thanks especially to Steve, much of
that Marxian economics was freed from
mechanical, formulaic interpretations
that reflected the exigencies of Soviet
economic development and foreign
policy, and the pressures and legacies
of Cold War polarizations. Likewise,
Steve took the lead in interrogating
major modern theoretical breakthroughs
(such as structuralism,
semiotics, post-structuralism, and postmodernism)
to see how their insights
could enrich Marxian economics.
Most of Steve’s work was devoted
to collaborations with me on Marxian
theory. Our first major book, Knowledge
and Class: A Marxian Critique of Political
Economy, was published by the
University of Chicago Press in 1987, over
Milton Friedman’s objection. It established
a different interpretation of Marx’s
concepts of class and of causality (newly
renamed “overdetermination,” a term
taken from Sigmund Freud and the
Marxian philosophers György Lukács
and Louis Althusser). In our many books
and articles over the years, we developed
these concepts into a genuinely
new Marxian economics.
The last year of Steve’s life, 2012, saw
the publication of our Contending
Economic Theories: Neoclassical,
Keynesian and Marxian by the MIT Press.
The book is a summary of what divides
the economics profession and an exploration
of the high stakes of that division.
It is also a tool for passing on, to a
new generation, the excitement and
political power that flow from a key
realization: that economics always was,
is, and will be a contested terrain of differing
perspectives connected to clashing
political agendas.
Last year, Steve and I noted, with a
certain ironic satisfaction, that capitalism’s
worst crisis since the 1930s has
turned a new generation of young people
toward the criticism of capitalism
and thereby the discovery of Marxism.
What they are now learning owes a great
deal to the superb mind and passionate
commitment of Steve Resnick. D&S
RICK WOLFF is a visiting professor in
the Graduate Program of International
Affairs at New School University.
Steve directed his
twin passions of
economic theory and
econometrics toward
the goals of social
change and mastery of
Marxian economics.

Richard Wolff

 Rdwolff.com   |    Democracy at Work 

 



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