{"id":2100,"date":"2020-09-15T15:02:51","date_gmt":"2020-09-15T13:02:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/?p=2100"},"modified":"2020-09-15T17:51:56","modified_gmt":"2020-09-15T15:51:56","slug":"recension-de-michael-heinrich-an-introduction-to-the-three-volumes-of-karl-marxs-capital-monthly-review-press-new-york-2012-240pp-15-95-pb","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/?p=2100","title":{"rendered":"Recension de Michael Heinrich An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Karl Marx\u2019s Capital"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"authors big\"><strong><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft\" src=\"https:\/\/marxandphilosophy.org.uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/11\/intro-to-capital-200x300.jpg\" alt=\"\" \/>Recension par Chris O&rsquo;Kane de Michael Heinrich<\/strong>, <em>An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Karl Marx\u2019s Capital<\/em><\/p>\n<p class=\"bibliographic_information\">Monthly Review Press, New York, 2012. 240pp., $15.95 pb<\/p>\n<p>Publi\u00e9 sur <a href=\"https:\/\/marxandphilosophy.org.uk\/reviews\/7756_an-introduction-to-the-three-volumes-review-by-chris-okane\/\">Marx &amp; Philosophie Review of Books<\/a>, le 2 janvier 2013<\/p>\n<p>Michael Heinrich is a leading exponent of what is known as the New German Reading of Marx which interprets the theory of value that Marx presents in <em>Capital<\/em> as a socially specific theory of impersonal social domination. He is a collaborator on the MEGA edition of Marx and Engel\u2019s complete works and has published several philological studies of <em>Capital.<\/em> He has also authored a major theoretical work on Marx\u2019s theory of value, <em>The Science of Value<\/em>, which is forthcoming in the Historical Materialism book series. Heinrich advocates a monetary interpretation of Marx\u2019s theory of value in both these types of work. A few of Heinrich\u2019s shorter pieces on specialist topics, such as \u2018Engels\u2019 Edition of the Third Volume of Capital and Marx\u2019s Original Manuscript\u2019 and \u2018Capital in general and the structure of Marx\u2019s <em>Capital<\/em>. New Insights from Marx\u2019s Economic Manuscripts of 1861-63\u2019, have been translated. <em>An Introduction to all Three Volumes of Capital <\/em>is his first full-length work to appear in English.<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><\/p>\n<p>Heinrich\u2019s theoretical orientation and his textual methodology distinguish his introduction to <em>Capital<\/em> itself from others. To my knowledge it is the only introduction that discusses important issues of philology and translation that are vital to understanding <em>Capital<\/em>. It is also the only introduction to <em>Capital <\/em>that espouses Marx\u2019s theory of value as a monetary theory of value. In the following review I focus on the latter and refrain from discussing many of the points where Heinrich utilizes the former.<\/p>\n<p>Heinrich\u2019s interpretation of the monetary theory of value underlies the focus and structure of <em>An Introduction. <\/em>In the first place, Heinrich uses what he calls the monetary theory of value to distinguish his interpretation of Marx from what he terms \u2018traditional\u2019 interpretations of Marx. In the second place his exposition of<em> Capital <\/em>focuses on demonstrating how the monetary theory of value unfolds across all three volumes of<em> Capital.<\/em> Heinrich also provides his own theoretical analysis which complements his interpretation of Marx by: a) pointing out the contemporary relevance of Marx\u2019s critique of political economy and b) supplementing Marx\u2019s theory by accounting for social phenomena, such as the state, that are not covered in<em> Capital<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>This orientation is laid out in two preliminary chapters where Heinrich situates his interpretation of <em>Capital <\/em>in relation to \u2018Traditional Marxism.\u2019 Heinrich\u2019s discussion of \u2018worldview Marxism\u2019 is of particular importance to this distinction. The term \u2018worldview Marxism,\u2019 is used to designate the economist, determinist and teleological belief-system of thenineteenth and early twentieth century workers movement. For Heinrich \u2018worldview Marxism\u2019 ignored the critical aspect of Marx\u2019s critique of political economy in favour of an orientation that played an \u2018identity-constituting role\u2019 (25) establishing the position of the working class and explaining \u2018all problems in the simplest way imaginable.\u2019 (25). In Heinrich\u2019s view today\u2019s widespread conceptions about Marx and Marxism are based on these tenets of \u2018worldview Marxism.\u2019 (26)<\/p>\n<p>The interpretation of <em>Capital <\/em>that Heinrich puts forward contrasts with this traditional interpretation. His conception of capitalism as a historically specific and systematic form of impersonal domination informs Heinrich\u2019s discussion of the object of Marx\u2019s critique of political economy. In contrast to the historically pervasive logico-historical reading of <em>Capital<\/em> which holds that <em>Capital <\/em>describes the historical development of empirical reality<em>,<\/em> Heinrich stresses that <em>Capital<\/em> consists in a theoretical examination of the \u2018essential determinates\u2019 (31) of the capitalist mode of production in its \u2018ideal average.\u2019 (31) In opposition to those who treat Marx as a political economist, Heinrich stresses that <em>Capital <\/em>is a critique of political economy. For Heinrich<em> Capital<\/em> does not criticize the conclusions of political economists but the way the very discipline of political economy analyzes capitalism. Thus, rather than providing an alternative political economy, Heinrich argues that Marx\u2019s critique of political economy aims to demonstrate two things: the perverse manner in which capitalism is socially constituted and reproduced at enormous social and human costs and the absurd theoretical standpoint of the discipline of political economy. Finally, Heinrich forcefully differentiates himself from dialectical characterizations of Marx. By contending that Marx only uses dialectics in the methodological presentation of <em>Capital<\/em> \u2013 in which \u2018individual categories are <em>unfolded<\/em> from one another\u2019 (37)- Heinrich distinguishes himself from Engels, Hegelian-Marxist and systematic dialectic interpretations of <em>Capital.<\/em> This position also leads Heinrich to argue that is only in volume three that Marx\u2019s \u2018ideal\u2019 depiction of capitalism approaches concrete reality.<\/p>\n<p>This distinction from \u2018traditional Marxism\u2019 is cashed out in Heinrich\u2019s discussion of the labour theory of value. Heinrich stresses that Marx conceives of value as the unintended outgrowth of historically specific social relations. This has two important consequences for Heinrich\u2019s analysis. In the first place he argues that value is constitutive of a structure that determines individual action, which is reproduced through these actions. (\u2018these relations impose a certain form of rationality to which all individuals must adhere if they wish to maintain their existence \u2026 the activity of individuals also reproduces the presupposed social relations.\u2019 (46) This means that individuals are compelled to act as bearer\u2019s of social relations. Capitalists function as personifications of economic categories with their actions compelled by the imperative of capitalist valorisation. Proletarians are coerced to sell their labour-power in order to survive. Capital, as self-valorising value, is thus an autonomous form of impersonal domination that compels the behaviour of individuals.<\/p>\n<p>In the second place Heinrich argues, contra traditional interpretations, that Marx\u2019s labour theory of value is not interested in proving that value corresponds to labour time. This means that Heinrich holds that Marx does not have a \u2018substantialist\u2019 theory of value, in which labour is directly embodied in the labour of products, and conceives of value as the \u2018specific social character of commodity-producing labour.\u2019 (47) As a result Marx\u2019s explanation of value unfolds across all three volumes of <em>Capital.<\/em><\/p>\n<p>From here Heinrich turns to <em>Capital <\/em>proper where his exposition of all three volumes provides an account of how the historically specific character of capitalist social labour is constituted and reproduced. Since a detailed account of his exposition of all three volumes of <em>Capital<\/em> exceeds the limits of a book review, I focus on some of the points that make Heinrich\u2019s excellent introduction distinct.<\/p>\n<p>Due to the importance Heinrich places on money, his exegesis of Part 1 of Volume 1 is thorough. Most will do well to follow Heinrich\u2019s advice that \u2018this chapter should be read particularly closely, including by those who think they understand the theory. (11) It is the best introduction to this difficult section of<em> Capital<\/em> that I have come across. His excellent discussion of money lucidly highlights the central role it plays in Marx\u2019s theory of value. This is outlined in his discussion of value as a real abstraction that consists in abstract labour and is realized in exchange. It also points to Heinrich\u2019s argument that Marx\u2019s theory of value combines production and circulation. Consequently, in Heinrich\u2019s interpretation, money is not \u2018an appendage of value \u2026 Marx\u2019s value theory is rather a monetary theory of value\u2019 (63). This is due to the fact that a monetary theory of value is necessary for explaining how commodities relate to each other in the act of exchange in which value is realized and how money1) functions to measure value, and 2) serves as the means of circulation of value. Money thus serves to unify production and circulation providing the means of capitalist valorisation. As later chapters point out money also plays an essential role in interest, credit, \u2018fictitious capital\u2019 and the periodic development of crises.<\/p>\n<p>Heinrich\u2019s discussion of the oft used and oft misunderstood concept of fetishism is also superb. Heinrich stresses that fetishism is not a form of false consciousness, alienation or a theory about rampant consumption. Instead he points out that Marx\u2019s theory of fetishism is a multi-faceted theory of \u2018objective\u2019 (71) social domination in which commodities possess \u2018spectral\u2019 and \u2018value-objectivity\u2019 (72) constituted by the reification of social relations in which things become personified and function as the bearers of value. Heinrich also points out that this process of fetishism also cultivates the naturalization and hypostatization of capitalist social relations. As Heinrich stresses these multi-faceted elements of the theory of fetishism do not simply consist in commodity fetishism but also apply to money and capital and reach their completion in the Trinity Formula.<\/p>\n<p>Heinrich\u2019s exposition of the chapters on production and circulation manage to convey a large amount of technical data and clearly enumerate the distinctions between the subsets of Marx\u2019s categories in a straightforward manner. He also does a good job of showing how these chapters relate to each other by focusing on the parts of Volume 2 that have to do with the circulation and turnover of capital.<\/p>\n<p>The material on Volume 3 is bound to be controversial. It is here that Heinrich questions three shibboleths of Marxism: the transformation problem, the law of the tendency of the rate of profit to fall and theories of the crisis-induced collapse of capitalism.<\/p>\n<p>The transformation problem is quickly dismissed. Heinrich points out that it is not a problem for the monetary theory of value. This is because this theory of value interprets price, not as something that value is transformed into, but at a lower level of abstraction in Marx\u2019s depiction of capital at its ideal average. Therefore value does not transform into price because the two exist at two different levels of abstraction in Marx\u2019s presentation. (148-9) As a result value does not transform into price and there is no transformation problem.<\/p>\n<p>Heinrich\u2019s criticism of the law of the tendency of rate of profit to fall is based on what he argues is Marx\u2019s problematic assumption that total capital does not fall along with total surplus value, and Heinrich\u2019s notion that <em>Capital <\/em>portrays a model of capitalism at its ideal average. Heinrich argues that Marx\u2019s assumption does not account for the fact that constant capital must increase the same amount that variable capital has been reduced in relation to total surplus value. This means that if constant capital does not increase strongly enough to compensate for the reduction of variable capital, then the total capital advanced declines. This creates a declining mass of surplus value and capital making it possible for profit to rise or fall. In conjunction with the importance placed on the idea of ideal average, Heinrich provocatively concludes that \u2018a long-lasting tendency for the rate of profit to fall cannot be substantiated at the general level of argumentation by Marx in <em>Capital.\u2019<\/em> (153)<\/p>\n<p>Lastly, Heinrich goes against theories of cataclysmic crisis rooted in the tendency of the rate of profit to fall by arguing that crisis is an integral and cyclical facet of capitalism. Such a propensity for crisis is rooted in money where the dissociation of use-value and money as the independent manifestation of value form the structural preconditions for the development of crisis. Heinrich argues that these preconditions are realized in the way that unlimited productive capacities of capitalist production are contradictorily related to limited consumption. This leads to over-production and over-accumulation which sets off crises in which production stagnates, capital is devalorized, capitalists go bankrupt and workers get fired. In Heinrich\u2019s view this dynamic eliminates the contradiction between production and consumption clearing the way for a rise in the rate of profit. In his estimation rather than signalling the cataclysmic and drawn out death pangs of capitalism, crises such as the one we are currently experiencing, are endemic periodic eruptions of capitalist business as usual.<\/p>\n<p>The short chapter on the state is symptomatic of Heinrich\u2019s efforts to supplement Marx\u2019s critique of political economy. He rightly points out the important role the state plays in capitalism. He argues that a theory of the state is necessary to round out Marx\u2019s critique of political economy. As he does elsewhere Heinrich opposes the \u2018traditional Marxist\u2019 account, which conceived of the state as the instrumental tool of the ruling class, with a form-determinant analysis influenced by the German state derivation debate of the 1970s. This leads Heinrich to formulate a theory of the historically specific function of the state as a neutral entity that is the guarantor of formally free laws. In this way Heinrich argues the state reinforces the relationship of exploitation and domination, which has its roots in the formal freedom of a working class compelled to sell its labour power.<\/p>\n<p>On the whole Heinrich\u2019s introduction is outstanding. The criticisms I have of it are indicative of how good it is. Although it is an introductory work, it reads like a substantial new theoretical interpretation of <em>Capital.<\/em> Consequently, a corresponding level of academic engagement and elucidation seems to be missing in Heinrich\u2019s criticisms of \u2018worldview Marxism\u2019 or of other popular moralist or humanist interpretations of <em>Capital<\/em>. Whilst Heinrich\u2019s references to his academic works are intended to address this issue, the fact that they are not available in English, means that they cannot be satisfactorily addressed.<\/p>\n<p>The German context in which the book was written also contributes to elements that seem out of place. This is notably the case with his dig at Robert Kurz and with his comments on anti-Semitism, both of which pertain to specific German debates and may not translate well to the general reader.<\/p>\n<p>Despite these quibbles, Heinrich provide a concise, clear and exemplary introduction to <em>Capital.<\/em> Because of its theoretical orientation I would venture to say that is also the most lucid introduction to the monetary theory of value in English. In addition Heinrich\u2019s translator, Alexander Locascio, has done valuable work correcting some important mistranslations in the standard editions of <em>Capital<\/em>. I can therefore recommend Heinrich\u2019s <em>Introduction<\/em> to readers of all levels who are interested in <em>Capital<\/em>. Those who have never read it before can benefit from its wide-ranging introduction to Marx\u2019s mature thought. Those who have read <em>Capital<\/em>, but avoided the value theory debates, can benefit from its excellent discussion of value. Whilst theorists rooted in Hegelian-Marxism can benefit from the way in which Heinrich shows how section one of Volume 1 relates to all three volumes of <em>Capital.<\/em> For all these reasons <em>An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Capital<\/em> is far and away the best introduction to <em>Capital <\/em>in English.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Recension par Chris O&rsquo;Kane de Michael Heinrich, An Introduction to the Three Volumes of Karl Marx\u2019s Capital Monthly Review Press, New York, 2012. 240pp., $15.95 pb Publi\u00e9 sur Marx &amp; Philosophie Review of Books, le 2 janvier 2013 Michael Heinrich &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/?p=2100\">Continuer la lecture <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":14481,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[7,10,11,162,165,166,19,20,32,34],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2100","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-bibliotheque-eng","category-capital","category-heinrich-critiques","category-lire-le-capital","category-livre-2","category-livre-3","category-marx","category-michael-heinrich","category-theorie-marxiste","category-veille-editoriale"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2100","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/14481"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=2100"}],"version-history":[{"count":4,"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2100\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":2112,"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/2100\/revisions\/2112"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=2100"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=2100"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/liremarx.noblogs.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=2100"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}