The Forgotten Category: Marxist Critique and the Question of Language
The Problem: When Critical Concepts Become Obvious My first encounter with Marxism was not through the unfinished movement of a thinker searching for concepts, but through an already organized intellectual structure. Like many students introduced to Marxist theory through university courses, I encountered a system divided into three interconnected fields: dialectical materialism, historical materialism, and political economy. The first presented the general laws of development governing nature, society, and thought; the second applied those principles to the historical organization of human societies; the third examined the internal logic of capitalism through concepts such as commodity, value, labour, capital, and surplus value. This organization had a clear pedagogical function. It offered students a map. Complex ideas could be located within a coherent architecture, and a vast body of writing could be approached through a limited number of fundamental principles. Such organizati...