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    • A Philosophy of Revolutionary Practice: The first two theses on Feuerbach [1977]
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    • Lucien Sève: death of a major Marxist philosopher[1]
    • Marx on British politics … and cab drivers[1]
    • On Production and Reproduction (and Back Again): Nancy Fraser’s Socialism and its Problems
    • Revisiting the 'Mode of Production': Enduring Controversies over Labour, Exploitation and Historiographies of Capitalism
    • Rigorous Suppression of Intellectual Creativity: Responding Again to Alf Hornborg
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    • The Development of British Capitalist Society: A Marxist Debate
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    • Karl Marx’s Mathematical Return
    • Thinking about Money
    • A Democracy of Forms: Levine, Latour and the New Formalism
    • A Marxist Utopian between East and West: Karl Schmückle
    • A Place for Polemic: Audacity, Implosion, and the Politics of Transition
    • Against the Tide
    • Anathema
    • Art and Value
    • Audible Politics
    • Between Constitution and Insurrection
    • Commodities, Price Formation and the Technologies of Power behind Markets
    • Communal Luxury: The Political Imaginary of the Paris Commune
    • Communist Insurgent
    • Crossing a twister: On Malm’s The Progress of this Storm (2018)
    • Echoes of the Brazilian Marseillaise
    • Financial Claims on the World Economy
    • Globalizing the History of Capital: Ways Forward
    • Half-Buried Books: The Forgotten Anti-Imperialism of Popular-Front Modernism
    • Hegemony, People, Multitude: Contemporary Movements and Radical Theory
    • Historical-Machinic Materialism
    • In the British Footsteps of the Prophet
    • Learning from Bogdanov
    • Lifeblood, Climate Change, and Confronting Fossil Capital’s ‘Other Moments’
    • Lu Xun and Leon Trotsky
    • Mao Redux?
    • Marx, Time, History
    • Melancholy and Mobilisation
    • Modernity and Capitalism: India and Europe Compared
    • Nietzsche in His Time: The Struggle Against Socratism and Socialism
    • On Elena Ferrante’s Neapolitan Novels
    • On Some Features of Marx’s Method
    • Organised By Crisis
    • Questions without Answers: The Dutch and German Communist Left
    • Resuscitating the Dialectic: Moore’s Capitalism in the Web of Life: Ecology and the Accumulation of Capital in the Supposed ‘Age of Man’
    • Rethinking the Birth of French Communism
    • Richard Müller: Sisyphus
    • Richard Müller: Sisyphus
    • Socialism in One Genre: On Cai Xiang’s Revolution and Its Narratives (Geming/Xushu)
    • Soviet Archaeology in Theory and Practice
    • State and Capital in the Era of Primitive Accumulation
    • State–Labour Relations and Spaces of Dissent: Whither Labour Activism?
    • Stavros Tombazos and the Discordance of Times
    • The Challenges of Understanding Digital Labour: Questions of Exploitation and Resistance
    • The Eastern Origins of Capitalism?
    • The Frankfurt School against the Nazis
    • The General Theory of Permanent Revolution
    • The Humanisation of Nature and the Naturalisation of Marxism
    • The Long Depression
    • The Materialist Rebirth of Dialectic
    • The Politics of Dialectics
    • The Prophet avec Lacan
    • Trotsky and the Problem of Soviet Bureaucracy
    • Two Revolutions, One International Legal Order
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  • Reading Guides
    • Marxism & Latin America: Jeffery R. Webber
    • Merchant Capital: Jairus Banaji
    • Marx, Engels & Theology: Roland Boer
    • Queer Marxism: Peter Drucker
    • Marxism & Cinema: Daniel Fairfax
    • Borderland Marxism and Russia’s Revolutionary Periphery: Eric Blanc
    • Ecology & Marxism: Andreas Malm
    • Marxism and Photography: A Reading Guide
    • Marxism, Space and a Few Urban Questions: A Rough Guide to the English Language Literature. Stefan Kipfer
    • Marxist Literary Criticism: An Introductory Reading Guide. Daniel Hartley
    • Origins of the French Fifth Republic: A Reading Guide
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    • David Abraham
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    • Evald Ilyenkov
    • Friedrich Engels
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    • Lucien Seve
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    • Maxime Rodinson
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    • Paul Mattick Sr.
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    • Pier Paolo Pasolini
    • Roman Rosdolsky (1898–1967)
    • Sadiq Jalal al-Azm
    • Sartre and his Critique of Dialectical Reason
    • Sartre's Second Volume
    • Serge Mallet
    • Vladimir Mayakovsky
    • Pedro Lemebel
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Marxist feminism

Intersectionality and Marxism

A Critical Historiography
Ashley J. Bohrer

In recent years, there has been renewed interest in conceptualising the relationship between oppression and capitalism as well as intense debate over the precise nature of this relationship. No doubt spurred on by the financial crisis, it has become increasingly clear that capitalism, both historically and in the twenty-first century, has had particularly devastating effects for women and people of colour. Intersectionality, which emerged in the late twentieth century as a way of addressing the relationship between race, gender, sexuality and class, has critiqued orthodox Marxism for its inattention to the complex dynamics of various social locations; in turn Marxist thinkers in the twenty-first century have engaged with intersectionality, calling attention to the impoverished notion of class and capitalism on which it relies. As intersectionality constitutes perhaps the most common way that contemporary activists and theorists on the left conceive of identity politics, an analysis of intersectionality’s relationship to Marxism is absolutely crucial for historical materialists to understand and consider. This paper looks at the history of intersectionality’s and Marxism’s critiques of one another in order to ground a synthesis of the two frameworks. It argues that in the twenty-first century, we need a robust, Marxist analysis of capitalism, and that the only robust account of capitalism is one articulated intersectionally, one which treats class, race, gender and sexuality as fundamental to capitalist accumulation.

Subscribe to Marxist feminism

Historical Materialism is a Marxist journal, appearing 4 times a year, based in London. Founded in 1997 it asserts that, not withstanding the variety of its practical and theoretical articulations, Marxism constitutes the most fertile conceptual framework for analysing social phenomena, with an eye to their overhaul. In our selection of material we do not favour any one tendency, tradition or variant. Marx demanded the 'Merciless criticism of everything that exists': for us that includes Marxism itself.

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