Marxian


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Marx·i·an

 (märk′sē-ən)
n.
One that studies, advocates, or makes use of Karl Marx's philosophical or socioeconomic concepts as a method of analysis and interpretation, as in political economy or historical or literary criticism.

Marx′i·an adj.
Marx′i·an·ism n.

Marxian

(ˈmɑːksɪən)
adj
1. (Government, Politics & Diplomacy) of or relating to Karl Marx and his theories
ˈMarxianism n
Translations

Marxian

adjMarxisch
References in periodicals archive ?
of Arizona) examines the place of the emergent middle class in contemporary society, adopting the Foucauldian perspective of the dispositive to overcome the incompatibilities between Marxian, Weberian, and Habermasian conceptualizations of the middle class and show how it is constituted through power, wealth, and risk in the neoliberal economy, through media and communication, and through the values and norms transmitted through individualization.
The second, and larger group, follows the development of political philosophy from its Classical origins to the present day with 23 essays on the early Christian period, the mediaeval, sixteenth-century Reformation; seventeenth-century absolutism, nineteenth-century liberalism, socialism, Marxian communism and so on.
It glorifies the American working class - when Damon the labourer and secret maths genius bests a frat-boy with a hip-hop paced treatise on Marxian sociology and wins the heart of Minnie Driver (who wins mine every time she cries on screen), I cheered out loud (incongruously in First Class).