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(1995) Rational choice Marxism, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.

Rational choice Marxism

is the game worth the candle?

Ellen Meiksins Wood

pp. 79-135

Some time ago, in the pages of the New Left Review, a claim was made on behalf of "rational choice Marxism" as "a fully fledged paradigm, which deserves to take its place beside the two other constellations of theory currently discernible within the broad spectrum of progressive social thought — namely, post-structuralism and critical theory" (see above, pp. 61–2). More than that: "it is now only within the rational choice context that some of the leading items on the classical agenda of Marxist theory — historical explanation and delineation of social form, the collective dynamics of class struggle, the evolution and evaluation of capitalism — can be fruitfully discussed." These are very large claims, and if this new "paradigm" can even partially live up to them, it deserves the vogue it is now enjoying in the Anglo-American academy. A theoretical advance in any one of the "leading items on the classical agenda of Marxist theory" would be a worthy accomplishment; but it would indeed be a remarkable achievement if, even without driving any likely competitors from the field, this body of thought could be shown to merit the status of a "fully fledged paradigm", a comprehensive theoretical "constellation" with the explanatory range of classical Marxism.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-24183-5_4

Full citation:

Meiksins Wood, E. (1995)., Rational choice Marxism: is the game worth the candle?, in T. Carver & P. Thomas (eds.), Rational choice Marxism, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 79-135.

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