
Capital: The Economics Classic, An Abridged Version
Karl Marx(Author)
Capstone Publishing Ltd
1st Edition
Will be published approx. on 26. November 2026
Book
Hardback
400 pages
978-1-907326-25-7 (ISBN)
Description
The foundational critique of capitalism that transformed social science forever
In Capital: The Economics Classic, Karl Marx combines vivid historical detail with economic analysis to produce a penetrating examination of mid-Victorian capitalist society. This abridged edition makes Marx's most influential work accessible to modern readers while preserving the analytical depth that established it as the most significant work in twentieth- century political economy.
Capital depicts the unfolding of industrial capitalism as a tragic drama, revealing the mechanisms of exploitation, accumulation, and crisis that drive market economies. Marx accomplished for social science what Darwin achieved for biology, providing a systematic framework for understanding economic and social relations. This classic text retains its relevance for contemporary financial and economic discourse.
Readers will also find:
A systematic critique of classical political economy that reveals the inner workings of capitalist production and exchange
Historical analysis tracing the development of industrial capitalism including a depiction of the horrors of the 19th century factory system including the employment of children
Theoretical frameworks for understanding labour, value, and capital that continue to inform economic debate today
Insights into economic crises, inequality, and market dynamics that speak directly to current financial and political discussions
This accessible abridged edition distils Marx's essential arguments without sacrificing analytical rigor or historical depth. Included is an insightful Introduction by Tom Butler-Bowdon that assesses the intellectual influence of Capital on the world.
Essential reading for students of economics, political science, history, and sociology, Capital speaks to anyone seeking to understand the foundations of modern economic thought. This edition serves professionals, academics, and general readers interested in the intellectual roots of contemporary debates about markets, labour, and inequality.
In Capital: The Economics Classic, Karl Marx combines vivid historical detail with economic analysis to produce a penetrating examination of mid-Victorian capitalist society. This abridged edition makes Marx's most influential work accessible to modern readers while preserving the analytical depth that established it as the most significant work in twentieth- century political economy.
Capital depicts the unfolding of industrial capitalism as a tragic drama, revealing the mechanisms of exploitation, accumulation, and crisis that drive market economies. Marx accomplished for social science what Darwin achieved for biology, providing a systematic framework for understanding economic and social relations. This classic text retains its relevance for contemporary financial and economic discourse.
Readers will also find:
A systematic critique of classical political economy that reveals the inner workings of capitalist production and exchange
Historical analysis tracing the development of industrial capitalism including a depiction of the horrors of the 19th century factory system including the employment of children
Theoretical frameworks for understanding labour, value, and capital that continue to inform economic debate today
Insights into economic crises, inequality, and market dynamics that speak directly to current financial and political discussions
This accessible abridged edition distils Marx's essential arguments without sacrificing analytical rigor or historical depth. Included is an insightful Introduction by Tom Butler-Bowdon that assesses the intellectual influence of Capital on the world.
Essential reading for students of economics, political science, history, and sociology, Capital speaks to anyone seeking to understand the foundations of modern economic thought. This edition serves professionals, academics, and general readers interested in the intellectual roots of contemporary debates about markets, labour, and inequality.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Publishing group
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
ISBN-13
978-1-907326-25-7 (9781907326257)
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Schweitzer Classification