The Present as History: Essays and Reviews on Capitalism and SocialismMonthly Review Press, 1953 - 376 pages |
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Page 141
... race relations which are found in the world in which we live . This means that we are primarily interested in race relations which are characterized by attitudes of antagonism , and by behavior which is exploitative and discriminatory ...
... race relations which are found in the world in which we live . This means that we are primarily interested in race relations which are characterized by attitudes of antagonism , and by behavior which is exploitative and discriminatory ...
Page 142
... race relations leads to a principle of great importance . Since the dominant pattern has been imposed by whites in their own interest , it has been more or less consistently opposed and resisted by peoples of color . Race relations are ...
... race relations leads to a principle of great importance . Since the dominant pattern has been imposed by whites in their own interest , it has been more or less consistently opposed and resisted by peoples of color . Race relations are ...
Page 146
... race relations have recently come face to face with a powerful theory of society and , in order to meet this , the orthodox theorists have become mystics . This evi- dently had to be so because it is exceedingly terrifying for these ...
... race relations have recently come face to face with a powerful theory of society and , in order to meet this , the orthodox theorists have become mystics . This evi- dently had to be so because it is exceedingly terrifying for these ...
Contents
The Illusion of the Managerial Revolution | 3 |
Decomposition or Enrichment? | 74 |
Three Works on Imperialism | 93 |
Copyright | |
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accumulation American capitalism analysis assets backward countries banking basic bourgeois Burnham capi capitalist century consumption corporations course Deal Department dominant economic economists Essays essentially existence expansion demand exploitation Fabian Fabian Society fact follows forces German Hallgarten imperialism imperialist important income industrial interest investment banker J. P. Morgan Keynes Keynesians labor law of value less managerial Manifesto Marshall Plan Marx and Engels Marxian Marxian economics Marxism means of production ment million monopoly Morgan-First National movement nature Nazi Nazism Negroes nomic organization party period political economy possible problem Professor Hayek Professor Schumpeter's profit question race relations railroad Rails Banks reason revolution role Rosa Luxemburg ruling class Russia Say's law sense social system socialist society Soviet Union structure theory tion United Veblen western Europe whole workers