Karl Marx's Capital, Volume 1, Part 0

 

Capital Cover

First Edition, 1867

 

A Quest for a Secret:

 

Capital, Volume 1

 

 

 

This week, on this forum, the Communist University begins posting a ten-part
course on Karl Marx's Capital, Volume 1. 

 

The course on Capital, Volume 1 will be followed by a further ten-week
course on Capital Volumes 2 and 3. In other words, during the remainder of
this year, on this forum, we are about to cover the entire three volumes of
Karl Marx's great work, "Capital".

 

 

 

Karl Marx's "Capital, Volume 1", published in 1867, is the most outstanding
product of a long project that Marx begun in the 1840s, when he was still a
young man in his twenties. 

 

Volume 2, edited by Marx's lifelong comrade and intellectual collaborator
Frederick Engels, was published two years after Marx's death, in 1885.
Volume 3 was published in 1894, one year before Engels' death.

 

The entire project is a quest for a full explanation of what Marx called, at
the end of Chapter 18 of Volume 1: "The secret of the self-expansion of
capital." 

 

This secret is what Marx called Surplus-Value, gained by purchasing the
commodity Labour-Power at its full value, and then putting it to work and
expropriating the entire product of the actual Labour expended. This
constantly-repeated process sustains the otherwise unstable thing called
Capital, rather as a table-tennis ball may be kept in the air by a fountain
of water or of air.

 

In studying this book, it helps to be able to follow the development of
Marx's quest for "the secret of the self-expansion of capital", consciously.


 

Karl Marx's thought did not spring forth fully-elaborated in one moment.
Especially in the early years, Marx had to work very hard, and his quest was
still work-in-progress when he died. All this is apparent from works
produced prior to 1867, as much as from Volume 1 itself, and from the papers
he left for Engels to put together for publication, up to the very last page
of the last chapter of Volume 3, which ends: "[Here the manuscript breaks
off.]". 

 

Reading it as a quest, which it was, makes it more understandable.

 

The size of Capital, Volume 1

 

One challenge presented by Volume 1 is its uneven shape and large size. The
Communist University's method, strongly influenced by the teaching of Paulo
Freire, relies on certain simple principles and practices. We discuss
original texts. We use extracts from books to create "Short Texts" that can
be used as Freirean "codifications". The point is not to learn the work as
if for an examination, but rather to have a discussion, and thereby to
socialise our growing collective understanding of it.

 

In the particular case of "Capital", this principle of discussion is no less
crucial; but the huge size of the project made the delineation of "Short
Texts" problematic. Please note that the source of all our texts for this
series on Capital Volume 1 has been Marxists Internet Archive
<http://www.marxists.org/> . You can consult that text to fill in any
omissions you may find in the material presented.

 

The shape of Capital, Volume 1

 

Capital, Volume 1 contains 33 chapters. Most of them are short, but there
are five long ones, starting with Chapter 1 (Commodities).  Chapter 3
(Money) is also long, as are Chapter 10 (The Working Day), Chapter 15
(Machinery and Modern Industry), and Chapter 25 (General Law of Capital
Accumulation).

 

The structure of the book is deliberate, not accidental. Commodity (Chapter
1) is the right point of departure, and together with the subsequent two
chapters on Exchange, and Money, it sets the scene for Chapters 4 and 5
which give the outline "General Formula for Capital". 

 

The remaining 28 chapters are a carefully-paced rolling out of the idea of
Surplus-Value, with all its implications, in short, easy, and sometimes
repetitive steps. Exceptions are Chapters 10, 15 and 25, which are "books
within the book". Yet these inner books are also part of the quest for "the
secret of the self-expansion of capital". 

 

Consequent design of the CU series on "Karl Marx's Capital, Volume 1"

 

The above considerations led to the following decisions (which will be
explained further in the introductions to the individual texts):

 

.        The series begins with Marx's 1848 study-circle text called "Wage
Labour and Capital", and specifically with Engels' 1891 Introduction to the
first publication of that text, because it explains why Karl Marx worked for
so many years on the question of Surplus-Value, a question that had not been
fully answered in 1848, by anyone.

.        There are also two other texts showing the development of Marx's
work in the two decades prior to 1867. These help to get an overview of the
main work, and should assist the reader/student to get a grasp of Karl
Marx's overall intention. One of these consists of parts from the 1848
"Communist Manifesto". The other is extracts from Marx's 1865 talk to
workers called "Value, Price and Profit".

 

The above three instalments constitute the first part of our ten-part
course.

 

Capital Volume 1 itself is reduced, where necessary, in the following ways:

 

.        Some text is left out (i.e. "redacted"). This has been done with
the third section of Chapter 1, with six of the ten sections in Chapter 15,
and with part of Chapter 25.

.        Footnotes are sometimes left out. This is regrettable! The
footnotes to "Capital" are a treasury of great worth. For this reason,
wherever there is spare space, footnotes have been retained.

 

Capital Volume 1 is then re-divided in the following ways:

 

.        Short Chapters are combined together.

.        Long Chapters are divided.

.        In one situation (Chapters 2 and 3) a chapter is divided and part
of it is added to the previous chapter

 

The above results in a division of Capital Volume 1 into 20 parts, which are
than divided in an appropriate way among the remaining 9 parts (weeks) of
the course, with one "main" text in each part and the others given as
alternative, or additional, reading.

 

Thus we end up with a ten-week course, which is our standard CU
course-length. 

 

After completing Volume 1, we follow on with a ten-week combined treatment
of Capital, Volumes 2 and 3, but in these cases the codification has been
managed differently. It will be explained at the beginning of the second
course.

 

By completing this collective, co-operative reading of Marx's Capital, you
will join a relatively small group of people in this world who have actually
read it all. 

 

You will know by then that it is an enjoyable work, and not at all the
terrifying thing that it may at first appear to be.

 

.        To download the full Capital, Volume 1 course in PDF files, please
click here
<https://sites.google.com/site/cu2012courses/15-karl-marx-s-capital-volume-1
> 

 

.        To download any of the CU courses in PDF files please click here
<https://sites.google.com/site/cu2012courses/> .

 

 

 

 

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