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  1. From Financial Crisis to World-Slump: Accumulation, Financialisation, and the Global Slowdown.David McNally - 2009 - Historical Materialism 17 (2):35-83.
    This paper assesses the current world economic crisis in terms of crucial transformations in global capitalism throughout the neoliberal period. It argues that intense social and spatial restructuring after the crises of 1973–82 produced a new wave of capitalist expansion that began to exhaust itself in the late-1990s. Since that time, new problems of overaccumulation and declining profitability have plagued global capitalism. Interconnected with these problems are contradictions related to a mutation in the form of world-money, as a result of (...)
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  2.  60
    The Dual Form of Labour in Capitalist Society and the Struggle over Meaning: Comments on Postone.David McNally - 2004 - Historical Materialism 12 (3):189-208.
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  3. Locke, levelers and liberty-property and democracy in the thought of the 1st whigs.David McNally - 1989 - History of Political Thought 10 (1):17-40.
  4.  16
    Language, Praxis and Dialectics: Reply to Collins.David McNally - 2004 - Historical Materialism 12 (2):149-167.
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  5.  17
    Night Lights: Daniel Bensaïd’s Times of Disaster and Redemption.David McNally - 2016 - Historical Materialism 24 (4):107-128.
    Daniel Bensaïd’s meditations on utopia and revolution assume a materialist form in his grasp of the non-linear temporalities of value relations in capitalist society. The result is a dialectical understanding of time as irregular and prone to ruptural transformations. Bensaïd’s unique reflections in this area open up a ‘strategic sense of time’ as the space of revolutionary politics.
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  6.  34
    From Fetishism to 'Shocked Disbelief ': Economics, Dialectics and Value Theory.David McNally - 2012 - Historical Materialism 20 (3):9-23.
    The recent arrival ofFrom Economics Imperialism to Freakonomicsby Fine and Milonakis is especially propitious given the context of the Great Recession of 2008 – and the associated decline of public faith in the verities of mainstream economics. Fine and Milonakis provide a magisterial critical survey of contemporary economics and demonstrate the need for a ‘new and truly interdisciplinary political economy’ capable of ‘incorporating the social and historical from the outset’. But their cause requires the explicit development of value analysis within (...)
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  7.  12
    Even eagles need a push: learning to soar in a changing world.David McNally - 1991 - New York, N.Y.: Delacorte Press.
    Provides advice on achieving freedom, purpose, dignity, vision, and commitment.
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  8.  1
    Frankenstein’s Creature.David McNally - 2017 - Listening 52 (3):144-152.
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  9.  10
    Marx, Marxists and the financial forms of the crisis.David McNally - 2011 - International Journal of Management Concepts and Philosophy 5 (2):112.
  10.  44
    The Blood of the Commonwealth.David McNally - 2014 - Historical Materialism 22 (2):3-32.
    Insisting on the status of money as a creature of both the market and the state, this article challenges dualistic understandings of capitalist imperialism as entailing two fundamentally distinct logics, one capitalist, the other territorial. In opposition to the dual-logics position, the article argues for the distinctiveness of capitalist money in terms of a complex butunitarysocio-economic logic. The social dynamism of this logic involves the spatial-territorial extension of the domain of modern value relations, embodied in fully-capitalist money. Departing from the (...)
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