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Capital: Volume 2

A Critique of Political Economy

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Capital: Volume 2

By: Karl Marx
Narrated by: Derek Le Page
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About this listen

It was the close friendship and professional association between Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels that enabled Marx’s full vision presented in Capital: A Critique of Political Economy to come to fruition.

Following Marx’s death in 1883, Engels was able to step into the breach and, drawing on Marx’s extensive notes and writings, complete volume 2 of Capital, leading to its publication in 1885. Here, Marx turns his attention to the money owner, the money lender, the wholesale merchant, the trader and the entrepreneur or 'functioning capitalist.'

The work is divided into three parts: 'The Metamorphosis of Capital and Their Circuits'; 'The Turnover of Capital'; and finally 'The Reproduction and Circulation of the Aggregate Social Capital'. Though more theoretical and perhaps thus more challenging than volume 1, Marx’s intentions in volume 2 were clear: ‘We investigate...the social intertwining of different capitals, of the component parts of capital and of revenue.’ By looking at the ‘movement of commodities and of money’, Marx was able to clarify the patterns involved in the capitalist mode of production.

This is clear in the subtitle of volume 2: The Process of Circulation of Capital.

Translation: Samuel Moore and Edward Aveling.

Public Domain (P)2018 Ukemi Productions Ltd
Political Science Politics & Government Theory
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The most technical of the three volumes

Volume 2 of ‘Capital’ is seemingly the most technical of the three, since in this one he almost exclusively talks about concepts of political economy in the abstract, and very seldom diverts into the sort of tirades on the miserable condition of the working classes which we found in Volume 1 and will find again in Volume 3. It was published by Friedrich Engels in 1885 based on the notes left by Marx when he died.

In this volume he introduces a number of new concepts which are important for the remainder of his analysis. The first of these is the distinction between ‘fixed’ and ‘circulating’ capital — as opposed to (and often confused with) ‘constant’ and ‘variable’ capital, which concepts he introduced in the first volume.

The other key concept which he introduces here is that of ‘turnover,’ i.e., the period required for a given circulating capital to iterate through the process of production and circulation — or, inversely, the number of times such an iteration occurs in a given period (say, per annum).

He spends a great deal of this volume, perhaps 50% of it, discussing turnover and its effect on the surplus value which can be produced from a given starting capital. This is actually less dull than it sounds, even if he does pick over the effects produced by variations in turnover time in laborious and minute detail.

From about chapter 70 of the audiobook onwards, Marx begins an analysis of the circulation of capital around society at large, mathematically, by employing some basic assumptions. Although the maths. here is straightforward, using very simple numbers, nonetheless it gets very hard to follow henceforward. This is the point — perhaps the final five hours — at which it no longer really works as an audiobook, as it’s just too hard in narrated form to follow the flow of various chunks of social capital around the different branches and subdivisions of society. This is not the fault of the narration — which is, as ever, excellent — but simply the effect of the subject matter at this point.

One irritation with this audio edition of Volume 2 is that the chapters of the audiobook are not named. Volume 1 in the same series had the names of the chapters and sections of the book neatly encoded into the audiobook as an aid to navigation. So does Volume 3 in the series. But here, the chapter listing just reads, “Chapter 1,” “Chapter 2,” down to “Chapter 92.” Given that this volume is 29½ hours long in narrated form, this is rather disappointing.

On the whole, however, this is a fine audio production of this volume of Marx’s work, and well worth the purchase if you want to understand his philosophy in its original and undiluted form.

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best narration out there

Derek Le Page narrates this pivotal text better than any other narration of Marx's work I have ever listened to

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