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Stephen Resnick

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Nationality
  
United States

Died
  
January 2, 2013

Role
  
Economist


Name
  
Stephen Resnick

Influenced
  
Jack Amariglio


Born
  
October 24, 1938 (
1938-10-24
)

Institution
  
Yale University (1965–71) City College of New York (1971–73) University of Massachusetts Amherst (1973–2013)

Alma mater
  
University of Pennsylvania (B.S., 1960) MIT (Ph.D., 1964)

Influences
  
Marx, Althusser, Balibar

Contributions
  
Marxian economics, economic methodology, class analysis

Education
  
University of Pennsylvania, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Influenced by
  
Karl Marx, Louis Althusser, Etienne Balibar

Books
  
Contending Economic Theories, Economics: Marxian Versus N, Knowledge and class, Bringing it All Back Home: Cl, Class theory and history

School or tradition
  
Marxian economics

Stephen Resnick shares stories on economics in the 60s


Stephen Alvin Resnick (; October 24, 1938 – January 2, 2013) was an American heterodox economist. He was well known for his work (much of it written together with Richard D. Wolff) on Marxian economics, economic methodology, and class analysis. His work, along with that of Wolff, is especially associated with a post-Marxist and post-Althusserian perspective on political economy.

Contents

Class 01 socialist economics with stephen resnick


Biography

Resnick earned a B.S. in economics from the University of Pennsylvania in 1960. He received his Ph.D. in 1964 from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His dissertation was an econometric analysis of the European Common Market. His early work (during his tenure at Yale University between 1965–1971) was with Stephen Hymer and focused on issues of economic development and international political economy.

After a brief period of service at the City College of New York (1971–1973), Resnick began teaching at the Economics Department of the University of Massachusetts Amherst in 1973. He began working with Richard D. Wolff in this period, and from then until Resnick's death they published numerous articles and books together, formulating a nondeterminist, class analytical approach. Topics included Marxian theory and value analysis, overdetermination, radical economics, international trade, business cycles, social formations, the Soviet Union, and comparing and contrasting Marxian and non-Marxian economic theories.

Resnick's work with Wolff took Louis Althusser and Étienne Balibar's Reading Capital as its point of departure and developed a very subtle reading of Karl Marx's Capital Volumes II and III in their influential Knowledge and Class. In Resnick's work, Marxian class analysis entails the detailed study of the conditions of existences of concrete forms of performance, appropriation, and distribution of surplus labor. While there could be an infinite number of forms of surplus appropriation, the Marxist canon refers to ancient (independent), slave, feudal, capitalist, and communist class processes.

In 1989, Resnick joined efforts with a group of colleagues, ex- and then current students to launch Rethinking Marxism, an academic journal that aims to create a platform for rethinking and developing Marxian concepts and theories within economics as well as other fields of social inquiry. He remained a member of the editorial board of the journal until 1994, and continued thereafter to serve as a member of the advisory board of the journal.

Resnick continued to teach graduate seminars and undergraduate courses and direct dissertation research in economics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst until 2013. He received multiple teaching awards and taught classes in economic theory, economic development, and economic history. Resnick listed his primary research interests as Marxian theory and economic history and development.

Resnick died on January 2, 2013, as a result of leukemia.

Videos

  • "Course on Marxian Economics"
  • "Course on Socialist Economics"
  • "Past Present and Future of the Economics Department" Round table with Resnick, Katzner, Bowles
  • "Memorial for Stephen Resnick" Remarks of Richard D. Wolff
  • "The POLITICS of OUR 40-YEAR COLLABORATION"
  • References

    Stephen Resnick Wikipedia


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