The life-nerve of the dialectic: György Lukács and the metabolism of space and nature

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Abstract

One hundred years that shook the world. This is one way of receiving History and Class Consciousness by György Lukács, a text that is considered by many to be one of the most important in Marxist philosophy and dialectics since its first appearance in 1923. However, in approaching its centenary, how does the focus on dialectics that is at the text’s centre travel to address contemporary interdisciplinary concerns in political economy and radical geography? This article delivers a fresh reading of dialectics in and beyond History and Class Consciousness to distil the relevance of Lukács for contemporary political economists and radical geographers that, it is argued, necessarily lies in engaging with his method and understanding of totality. The focus dwells on totality and the ‘life-nerve’ of the dialectic, referring to the process of interiorising theory and practice in constituting a relational approach to analysing the metabolism of socio-nature. By so doing, the possibilities and limits of both totality and dialectics are revealed to political economists and radical geographers interested in furthering the case for methodological relationalism in their conceptions of the production of space and socio-nature.

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Altun, S., Caiconte, C., Moore, M., Morton, A. D., Ryan, M., Scanlan, R., & Smidt, A. H. (2023). The life-nerve of the dialectic: György Lukács and the metabolism of space and nature. Review of International Political Economy, 30(2), 584–607. https://doi.org/10.1080/09692290.2022.2032267

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