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  2. Neo-Marxism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-Marxism

    Neo-Marxism is a collection of Marxist schools of thought originating from 20th-century approaches [1] [2] [3] to amend or extend [4] Marxism and Marxist theory, typically by incorporating elements from other intellectual traditions such as critical theory, psychoanalysis, or existentialism. Neo-Marxism comes under the broader framework of the ...

  3. 21st-century communist theorists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/21st-century_communist...

    Whilst these theorists come from a broad range of traditions, included but not limited to the Black Radical Tradition, Eco-socialism, Maoism, Neo-Marxism, post-Marxism and Autonomist/Open Marxism, what they all tend to have in common is a critique of past socialist experiments, and a re-orientation of the revolutionary subject. [44]

  4. Mediation (Marxist theory and media studies) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mediation_(Marxist_theory...

    85) For many of these new thinkers, the very way that new forms of media are mediated by social actors, or way that these actors navigate the complex and contradictory forces of history, the material world, and culture through media is the key to the age old problem of mediation in Marxist theory.

  5. List of contributors to Marxist theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_contributors_to...

    Marxism and the Oppression of Women; Imagined Communities; Hegemony and Socialist Strategy; The Sublime Object of Ideology; Time, Labor and Social Domination; The Age of Extremes; The Origin of Capitalism; Empire; Late Victorian Holocausts; Change the World Without Taking Power; Caliban and the Witch; An Introduction to the Three Volumes of ...

  6. Post-Marxism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post-Marxism

    Post-Marxism is a perspective in critical social theory which radically reinterprets Marxism, countering its association with economism, historical determinism, anti-humanism, and class reductionism, [1] whilst remaining committed to the construction of socialism.

  7. Category:Neo-Marxism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Neo-Marxism

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  8. Neo-Gramscianism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neo-Gramscianism

    Neo-Gramscianism analyzes how the particular constellation of social forces, the state and the dominant ideational configuration define and sustain world orders. In this sense, the neo-Gramscian approach breaks the decades-old stalemate between the realist schools of thought and the liberal theories by historicizing the very theoretical ...

  9. List of political ideologies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_political_ideologies

    In political science, a political ideology is a certain set of ethical ideals, principles, doctrines, myths or symbols of a social movement, institution, class or large group that explains how society should work and offers some political and cultural blueprint for a certain social order.