Description

Book Synopsis

"Socialism" is a word that is now habitually taken to refer to a particular social system that prevailed in different parts of the globe during the twentieth century. This system was defined primarily by single-party rule with public (mainly state) ownership of the means of production along with a centrally planned economy. Its material base was generalised commodity production. The spokespersons of this system claim that this socialism was derived from Marx.


Paresh Chattopadhyay's Socialism and Commodity Production argues the falsity of this claim. On the basis of a comprehensive study of Marx's own texts, as well as a detailed engagement with a wide variety of theorists of socialist economics, it shows that Marx's socialism constituted an "Association" of free individuals in which private ownership, the commodity, wage labor and the state have no place.



Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Preface

Prologue

Twentieth-Century Socialism

Socialism as Minority Rule

Lenin's Role

The Relevance of Marx

A Caricature of Marx's Socialism

1 On Socialism: Association of Free Individuals

(Pre)conditions of Socialism

Associated Mode of Production

Ownership Relation

Exchange Relations

Distribution/Allocation

Labouring Individual under Socialism

2 Commodity Production

From Commodity to Capital

Paradoxes and Contradictions

On the Value Form

Commodity Circulation: Possibility of Crisis

3 Simple Commodity Production

The Problem

Discussion after Engels

The Critics

Criticisms Discussed

Conclusion

4 Commodity Production and Socialism in Marx's Followers

The First Followers: August Bebel and Karl Kautsky

Marxians after Kautsky

5 On Socialist Accounting

The Labour Process

Point of Departure

How to Proceed

Labour Time: Neglected Aspects

Labour Time and Non-labour Time

Socialist Accounting Framework

On Planning and the Unit of Calculation

6 Anarchist Communism

Peter Kropotkin

Carlo Cafiero

Anarchism and Marx: The Relation

7 Concerning Guild Socialism

Introduction

Guild Socialism as Democracy

Distribution and Allocation in Guild Socialism

Consumers and Producers

Transformation of the Existing Society

Ambiguities and Contradictions

8 On Market Socialism

Origin of Market Socialism

The Competitive Solution

Criticisms

Feasible Socialism

Analytical Market Socialism

Market Socialism Proper

Market Socialism - &'Marxian'

Market Socialism is Capitalism

9 The Problematic of a Non-capitalist Road to Socialism

Capital's Positive Contribution

The Controversy

Controversy Continued

Further Considerations

Epilogue

Illusion of the Epoch: Twentieth-Century Socialism

Preliminaries

Nature of Twentieth-Century Socialism

The Party-State

The Fundamental Question

References

Index

Socialism and Commodity Production: Essay in Marx

    Product form

    £25.50

    Includes FREE delivery

    RRP £30.00 – you save £4.50 (15%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Wed 24 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Paresh Chattopadhyay

    Out of stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Socialism and Commodity Production: Essay in Marx by Paresh Chattopadhyay

      Publisher: Haymarket Books
      Publication Date: 03/09/2019
      ISBN13: 9781642590500, 978-1642590500
      ISBN10: 1642590509

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      "Socialism" is a word that is now habitually taken to refer to a particular social system that prevailed in different parts of the globe during the twentieth century. This system was defined primarily by single-party rule with public (mainly state) ownership of the means of production along with a centrally planned economy. Its material base was generalised commodity production. The spokespersons of this system claim that this socialism was derived from Marx.


      Paresh Chattopadhyay's Socialism and Commodity Production argues the falsity of this claim. On the basis of a comprehensive study of Marx's own texts, as well as a detailed engagement with a wide variety of theorists of socialist economics, it shows that Marx's socialism constituted an "Association" of free individuals in which private ownership, the commodity, wage labor and the state have no place.



      Table of Contents

      Table of Contents

      Preface

      Prologue

      Twentieth-Century Socialism

      Socialism as Minority Rule

      Lenin's Role

      The Relevance of Marx

      A Caricature of Marx's Socialism

      1 On Socialism: Association of Free Individuals

      (Pre)conditions of Socialism

      Associated Mode of Production

      Ownership Relation

      Exchange Relations

      Distribution/Allocation

      Labouring Individual under Socialism

      2 Commodity Production

      From Commodity to Capital

      Paradoxes and Contradictions

      On the Value Form

      Commodity Circulation: Possibility of Crisis

      3 Simple Commodity Production

      The Problem

      Discussion after Engels

      The Critics

      Criticisms Discussed

      Conclusion

      4 Commodity Production and Socialism in Marx's Followers

      The First Followers: August Bebel and Karl Kautsky

      Marxians after Kautsky

      5 On Socialist Accounting

      The Labour Process

      Point of Departure

      How to Proceed

      Labour Time: Neglected Aspects

      Labour Time and Non-labour Time

      Socialist Accounting Framework

      On Planning and the Unit of Calculation

      6 Anarchist Communism

      Peter Kropotkin

      Carlo Cafiero

      Anarchism and Marx: The Relation

      7 Concerning Guild Socialism

      Introduction

      Guild Socialism as Democracy

      Distribution and Allocation in Guild Socialism

      Consumers and Producers

      Transformation of the Existing Society

      Ambiguities and Contradictions

      8 On Market Socialism

      Origin of Market Socialism

      The Competitive Solution

      Criticisms

      Feasible Socialism

      Analytical Market Socialism

      Market Socialism Proper

      Market Socialism - &'Marxian'

      Market Socialism is Capitalism

      9 The Problematic of a Non-capitalist Road to Socialism

      Capital's Positive Contribution

      The Controversy

      Controversy Continued

      Further Considerations

      Epilogue

      Illusion of the Epoch: Twentieth-Century Socialism

      Preliminaries

      Nature of Twentieth-Century Socialism

      The Party-State

      The Fundamental Question

      References

      Index

      Recently viewed products

      © 2026 Book Curl

        • American Express
        • Apple Pay
        • Diners Club
        • Discover
        • Google Pay
        • Maestro
        • Mastercard
        • PayPal
        • Shop Pay
        • Union Pay
        • Visa

        Login

        Forgot your password?

        Don't have an account yet?
        Create account