I'm looking for some critical resources and opinions on Lenin's theory of imperialism and monopoly capitalism as the highest stage of capitalism. A few things:
1) capitalism was always imperialistic from the beginning.
2) I skeptical of the claim that capitalism is at a new stage of monopoly capitalism, and I want to better understand what imperialism is in the context of global capitalism governed by the law of value (does that make sense?)
3) How does anti-imperialism as a politics change if we are to throw out this concept of monopoly capitalism? What does that mean for how we orient toward national liberation struggles?
also, related to this, any
also, related to this, any criticisms people have of the monthly review school's theory of monopoly capitalism would be appreciated!
A topical but false
A topical but false classic
Lenin: Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism
http://www.ruthlesscriticism.com/lenin.htm
A Problem of Methodology, by Karl Niebyl
http://www.marxistlibr.org/meth.html
there's this one, which
there's this one, which relates in particular to the critique of national liberation struggles
http://en.internationalism.org/ir/019/on-imperialism
Margaret Wirth's Zur Kritik
Margaret Wirth's Zur Kritik des staatsmonopolistischen Kapitalismus (1973), and a response (in German) by Robert Katzenstein (a defender, who appears to offer a variation): http://archiv.ub.uni-marburg.de/es/2014/0003/html/pdfs/Zur_Monopolproblematik.pdf
Thank you all, comrades!
Thank you all, comrades!
Unfortunately, Noa Rodman, I
Unfortunately, Noa Rodman, I don't speak German, but if you are able to -- I'm really interested in what this variation is.
The Uneven and Combined
The Uneven and Combined Development literature (in academic IR rather than Trot groups) tends to operate as a critique of aspects of Lenin's theory of imperialism ('inside-out' methodological internalism, stagism, weak account of societal multiplicity). Anievas and Nisancioglu's How the West Came to Rule is good on colonialism/imperial rivalries in the rise of capitalism, and this interview summarises their approach:
http://www.basepublication.org/?p=144
It is said (in an obituary,
It is said (in an obituary, linked on his wiki-page) that Katzenstein's position differed somewhat from the more mainstream in the DDR, in that he rejected a simplistic notion of the state's control by the monopolies. I don't know how far that's accurate. Here is a list of his articles online.
--
The French CP theorist of state monopoly capitalism is Paul Boccara:
http://www.pcf.fr/31856
thank you comrades
thank you comrades