Capital Volumes 2 and 3, Part 0

 



 

General Introduction to Karl Marx's Capital, Volumes 2 and 3

 

The second and third volumes of Karl Marx's Capital will be serialised here
during the fourth quarter of 2013.

We have first to consider how we will do it. These works appear difficult,
and long. We are trying to make a way to move through them without stalling.


 

This will not be done by examining every detail, but it will be done in such
a way as we can gain a broad idea of the scope and direction of Marx's
intentions.

 

Division

 

Fortunately, Marx's division of Volume 2 into three Parts, and Volume 3 into
seven Parts, will allow a convenient arrangement of the two volumes together
into a "Generic Course" of ten parts, like the other fifteen courses of the
Communist University.

 

Each Part of the two books is further divided into several Chapters. We will
not attempt to tackle each chapter, or to amalgamate chapters. Instead, as a
rule, a suitable chapter will be chosen from each part to serve as basis for
discussion, while the Introduction will attempt to relate the chosen chapter
to the entire Part.

 

Thus, while we will not have completed an exhaustive reading of the two
works, yet we will have a much better idea of their scope, their shape, and
their trajectory, and with luck, a good understanding of some of their
highlights, or "salient points".

 

Those will be deemed suitable chapters for discussion which are short
enough, and written in prose rather than relying on formulae. Otherwise, the
content of the chapters will dictate the choice.

 

The Puzzle of Volumes 2 & 3

 

The major question that arises with Volumes 2 and 3 of "Capital" is whether,
as Engels wrote in his Preface to Volume 3, they contain "the most important
parts of the entire work", or whether Volume 1 remains the essential answer
to the quest for "the secret of the self-increase of capital" - surplus
value.  Marx's words, also from the beginning of Volume 3, provide a clue:

 

"The various forms of capital, as evolved in this book, thus approach step
by step the form which they assume on the surface of society, in the action
of different capitals upon one another, in competition, and in the ordinary
consciousness of the agents of production themselves."

 

It is becoming a fashion to quote from Volume 3 in particular, sometimes in
a manner that implies that a good knowledge of Volume 1 is not enough any
more, or can be "trumped" by those with knowledge of Volume 3.

 

But if it is understood that Marx's purpose was to challenge "economics",
and not to confirm it, and thereby to go beneath "the ordinary consciousness
of the agents of production" to the real relations that exist, then Volume 1
must remain the ruling and determinant volume out of the three main volumes
(Volume Four is Marx's summarised reading notes, called "Theories of Surplus
Value").

 

Indispensable

 

Nevertheless, Engels' remarks have some meaning, especially today, in the
context of the "Global Economic Meltdown" of 2008, and the on-going "World
Economic Crisis".

 

Because it is in Volume 3 that we arrive at Marx's very clear understanding
of the way that capital plays out in the dominant public realm, and
consequently in the power politics of the day. This is what makes Volume 3
in particular such a valuable and indeed indispensable book for today.

 

To consult a different study guide, mainly composed of questions but with
some fruitful links, you may go to the MIA Study Guide for Capital Volume
Two <http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1885-c2/guide/index.htm> ,
and the MIA Study Guide for Capital Volume Three
<http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1894-c3/editorial/guide.htm> .

 

Amandla!

 

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

 

 

 

 

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