This collection of articles by Lebowitz (emeritus, economics, Simon Fraser U., Canada) began as a collection of essays published from the early 1970s onwards on discrete economic
topics--neo-Ricardian theory, analytical Marxism, the falling rate of profit, crisis theory, monopoly capital, Paul Sweezy, advertising, and the capitalist state--but as he put it together he
came to realize that there was a unifying theme running through them concerning the methodological project of Karl Marx, which he here aims to "rescue and retrieve" by also including five new
essays describing it in relation to the other topics in the essays. Where others have most crucially gone astray concerning Marx's method, Lebowitz argues, is neglecting the centrality of the
concept of totality and misunderstanding the relation of the inner structure of capital to its necessary forms of existence in competition. Annotation 穢2009 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
(booknews.com)