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Empire by Michael Hardt
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Empire

by M Hardt (otherwise under Michael Hardt)

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53247,818 (3.44)None
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Harvard University Press (2001), Paperback, 478 pages

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Tags:politics, theory, economics, non-fiction
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Empire, Michael Hardt & Antonio Negri, and A Theory of Post-Colonial Literature, Alfredo J. Lopez. Canadian Literature, 178 (autumn 2003), pp. 134-37
Xerxesxerxes | Jun 10, 2009 |  
It's great ( )
Hugsted | Oct 31, 2008 |  
If there is a work that can be called a 'Communist Manifesto' for our times, this is undoubtedly it. ( )
Fledgist | Jan 21, 2006 |  
The various Voice of the Turtle essays on Empire are available through this page:

http://voiceoftheturtle.org/show_arti...

Malcolm Bull's review in the LRB is here:

http://www.lrb.co.uk/v23/n19/bull01_....
chrisbrooke | Oct 4, 2005 |  
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0674006712, Paperback)

Empire is a sweeping book with a big-picture vision. Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri argue that while classical imperialism has largely disappeared, a new empire is emerging in a diffuse blend of technology, economics, and globalization. The book brings together unlikely bedfellows: Hardt, associate professor in Duke University's literature program, and Negri, among other things a writer and inmate at Rebibbia Prison in Rome. Empire aspires to the same scale of grand political philosophy as Locke or Marx or Fukuyama, but whether Hardt and Negri accomplish this daunting task is debatable. It is, however, an exciting book that is especially timely following the emergence of terrorism as a geopolitical force.

Hardt and Negri maintain that empire--traditionally understood as military or capitalist might--has embarked upon a new stage of historical development and is now better understood as a complex web of sociopolitical forces. They argue, with a neo-Marxist bent, that "the multitude" will transcend and defeat the new empire on its own terms. The authors address everything from the works of Deleuze to Jefferson's constitutional democracy to the Chiapas revolution in a far-ranging analysis of our contemporary situation. Unfortunately, their penchant for references and academese sometimes renders the prose unwieldy. But if Hardt and Negri's vision of the world materializes, they will undoubtedly be remembered as prophetic. --Eric de Place

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:15 -0400)

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