das kapital

Author
Discussion

hairyben

Original Poster:

8,516 posts

183 months

Sunday 5th November 2017
quotequote all
So, with both my own impression, and the opinions of many far more qualified than I, that a resurgence in a form of neo-marxism is behind a lot of todays politics, I was curious to find out more of what this is all about. As this work seems to have respect from across political and social spectrums it seems a good representation.

While I ate books and read at adult level as a kid I left school at 16, havent read all that much in the intervening 20 years, but recently decided to turn this around. Perhaps then a bold choice, but by god, was he paid by the word? Why a sentance when a chapter will do? The labouring of the point over and over makes me wonder if some form of indoctrination is being attempted rather than simple informing. Im about a tenth in. Do we ever get past coats and linen equations, into the meat of an actual ideology?

hairyben

Original Poster:

8,516 posts

183 months

Friday 17th November 2017
quotequote all
I guess I could have asked for an easier "in" first. Given its rep I feel there'll some satisfaction is completing it, especially when the allways-bashing-the-tories-on-facebook sect of my social circle seem not to have managed it either. I don't think I'd call it essential reading though.

I want to finish the book and give it it's chance before summarising too much but I'm a little disappointed so far, which is 27% on the kindle so maybe 40% by vol less references. I came to it looking for explanation and insight to the leftist mentality, that I can appreciate even if beg to differ, why many otherwise kind and intelligent people are deadset in view yet all they can muster is bile and name calling. But all I find are some pretty blatantly flawed concepts from someone with an obvious chip, he's not even trying to hide his contempt for the capitalist through the language he employs so how can you treat it as an analysis rather than a piece of propaganda?

At the part of reading about the actual working conditions and exploitation of the time and I can understand why anyone would loath the ruling classes and/or the capitalists, but being or representing the victim doesn't make your solution automatically best, (and not sure working conditions of 150+ years ago has much relevance in today's politics.)

I'll give it some more. Who knows, maybe I'll be along tomorrow rousing everyone to lets go burn some tories?

hairyben

Original Poster:

8,516 posts

183 months

Friday 13th April 2018
quotequote all
Finished it!

Pretty tedious going, he really does labour his observations over and over. As a historical document its interesting though, ironically those with the most to learn might be those preachy lefties who'd do well to educate themselves in just how badly the common man in england has been treated before spouting about "our" white privilege and ascribed guilt...

Without diving too deep into the politics (this is the book forum) , I think Marx makes the all too common mistake of ascribing the ruthlessness of man to some external factor, in this case the system of economics we employ, and that if you change the tool available you can change the mindset behind it.

hairyben

Original Poster:

8,516 posts

183 months

Sunday 22nd April 2018
quotequote all
Why thank you.

You're not the first to suggest the road to Wigan pier, I did read several of Orwells as a kid, found him to be a depressing bd but maybe a revisit is in order.

As for Marx, being brought up on pride in hard work and personal freedom values I was unlikely to call for revolution, but I'm empathatic, I like to try to see what makes people tick, and I was hoping to find some charisma lurking within this that explains the wide popularity and uptake of his ideas. But we see little of Marx himself, more a load of moaning about unfairness that pretty direct lines to today's SJWs. And then in the communist manifesto the colossal leap to a centralised system of politics that can only be achieved with total authoritarianism with no justification or working out or demonstration of how it will overcome the flaws of capitalism and democracy, just a conviction that this is our saviour from tyranny.

Jordan Peterson can sumarise in ten minutes the flaws in post modernism/Marxism and there's nothing here to feed the intellectual curiosity of wanting to look beyond his brief summary. I understand a little of why people run marathons though; you expend a vast amount to end up back where you began with little really to show for it but the fact you did it.