Publish Date |
November 03, 2023 |
Category |
Pets / Cats Literary Criticism |
Price |
$36.95 |
ISBN: 9781478019251
Format: Paperback
Pages: 408
Publisher: Duke University Press Books
Published: November 03, 2023
“Marx for Cats is an undomesticated and indefinable meow de coeur. You can open this book anywhere---it's a Marxist Choose Your Own Adventure---and come away as unsettled, possessed, and reflective as any transportative encounter with a cat might leave you.”“Who knew that following cats could open up history and enliven Marxism? This delightful archive of the feline in class struggle reminds us that cats are our comrades. Hand in paw, we have a world to win!”"Marx for Cats is at all times a playful, curious, and erudite foray into feline-inspired language and compelling anecdotes about cats. Its unrepenting attitude towards issues of linguistics and representation in interspecies economics will provoke, intrigue, and maybe seduce adepts of postmodernism, obscure etymologies, and puns.""Marx for Cats is fun, sometimes tongue-in-cheek, and often surprising. It is intended to leaven not just dense theory but also our bloody history of slavery, terror, civil wars, and strike-breaking. But there is also a serious project at work here too – namely a call for interspecies solidarity.""Marx for Cats is more than just a cat-centred history of capitalism. It is a work of animal rescue, a project of meticulous retrieval and dazzling curation. . . . Marx for Cats is a formally inventive academic beast book that’s worth the cost of entry as much for its clarifying guided tour of Marx’s critique of political economy as for its collage of obscure and bizarre moments of human–cat relations.""La Berge has put together an almost encyclopedic history of the connection between cats and class struggle, something to make every Marxist a cat lover and every cat lover a Marxist. . . . La Berge demonstrates the connection between cat and class struggle, and how cats can help us make sense of our history, but maybe they can also help us think about the future; about a world that is organized not by work or consumption, but the thriving of different species."