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{{Short description|German philosopher}}
{{Short description|German philosopher (1943–2012)}}
{{For|the American basketball player|Rob Kurz}}
{{Multiple issues|
{{Expand German|Robert Kurz|date=March 2016}}
{{Distinguish| Robert Kurtz}}
{{Expand Swedish|Robert Kurz|date=April 2020}}
{{Expand language|langcode=de|date=March 2016|langcode2=fr}}
[[File:RobertKurz.jpg|thumb|right|Kurz on an [[Association for the Taxation of Financial Transactions and for Citizens' Action|ATTAC]]-congress in 2009]]
{{Expand French|Robert Kurz|date=April 2020}}
'''Robert Kurz''' (24 December 1943 – 18 July 2012) was a German [[philosopher]], [[social critic]], [[journalist]] and [[editor]] of the journal ''[[Exit!]]<ref name=":4">{{Cite journal |last1=Bolt |first1=Mikkel |last2=Routhier |first2=Dominique |title=Kritisk teori som radikal krise teori: Kurz, Krisis og Exit! om værdikritik, kapitalismens krise og sammenbrud. |url=https://research.ku.dk/search/result/?pure=en%2Fpublications%2Fkritisk-teori-som-radikal-kriseteori(e193c9ce-e4f2-4420-a4a4-a889a13a2097).html |journal=Arbejderhistorie: Tidskrift for Historie, Kultur og Politik (2014) |date=26 April 2007 |type=Peer reviewed journal |language=Danish |issue=2 |pages=77–93 |issn=0107-8461 |via=University of Copenhagen}}</ref>'' He was one of Germany's most prominent theorists of [[value criticism]].<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":0">[http://www.spiegel.de/kultur/gesellschaft/publizist-und-philosoph-robert-kurz-ist-tot-a-845455.html "Erneuerer des Marxismus: Robert Kurz ist tot"] ''[[Spiegel Online]]''. 20 July 2012. Retrieved on 6 September 2012.</ref>
}}
[[File:RobertKurz.jpg|thumb|right|Robert Kurz on an [[Association for the Taxation of Financial Transactions and for Citizens' Action|ATTAC]]-congress in March 2009]]
'''Robert Kurz''' (24 December 1943 – 18 July 2012) was a German [[Marxist]] [[philosopher]], [[social critic]], [[journalist]] and [[editor]] of the journal ''Exit!'' He was one of Germany's most prominent theorists of [[value criticism]].<ref>[http://www.spiegel.de/kultur/gesellschaft/publizist-und-philosoph-robert-kurz-ist-tot-a-845455.html "Erneuerer des Marxismus: Robert Kurz ist tot"] ''[[Spiegel Online]]''. 20 July 2012. Retrieved on 6 September 2012.</ref>


==Life and work==
==Life and work==
Robert Kurz was born on 24 December 1943 in [[Nuremberg]] to a German working-class family. During his military service he was involved in pacifist propaganda and participated in the "Ostermärschen," protest marches against atomic weapons in the 1960s. Kurz studied [[philosophy]], [[history]] and [[paedagogy]] at the [[university]] of [[Erlangen]] without taking a degree. He participated in the "student revolt" in 1968 and took part in the intense discussions within the [[New Left]].<ref name=":1">UTOPIE kreativ, [https://www.rosalux.de/fileadmin/rls_uploads/pdfs/Utopie_kreativ/121-2/UTOPIE1211221.pdf Heft 121/122] (November/Dezember 2000), S. 1133-1155.</ref> He was a member of the [[Kommunistischer Arbeiterbund Deutschland]], KABD (Communist Workers League of Germany; later, named the [[Marxist–Leninist Party of Germany]]) during the 1970s, but then quit because of his critique of the leadership.<ref>Geschichte der MLPD, II. Teil, 2. Halbband, {{ISBN|3-88021-151-5}}, p. 405.</ref> He then multiplied the meetings in view of a renewal of the critical theory, which became concrete in the 1980s with the first attempts of the current of which he was to be the principal founder and theorist, the "critique of value" (Wertkritik).<ref name=":4" />


Starting in the 1980s, Kurz developed a fundamental critique of the basic forms of socialization in the modern world - based on the question of the structural causes of the inefficient Eastern bloc economy. He turned against the uncritical affirmation of the concept of labor by the Marxist workers' movement.<ref name=":4" /> His book ''Der Kollaps der Modernisierung'' (The Collapse of Modernization), published by Eichborn-Verlag in 1991, unfolds a theory of the collapse of modern world society, which assumes that, due to rationalization processes, wage labor is gradually disappearing and that the system as a whole is heading toward a "barbaric end."<ref name=":4" /> As in his later works, Kurz offers an outlook on a society that is no longer based on money-mediated commodity exchange. In order to overcome the crisis, he argues, a "sensual reason" is indispensable that is capable of seeing and using things outside their historically conditioned commodity character. As well as a categorical critique of the ontological categories of modernity.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Rasmussen |first1=Mikkel Bolt |last2=Routhier |first2=Dominique |date=2019-04-03 |title=Critical Theory as Radical Crisis Theory: Kurz, Krisis, and Exit! on Value Theory, the Crisis, and the Breakdown of Capitalism |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08935696.2019.1592408 |journal=Rethinking Marxism |language=en |volume=31 |issue=2 |pages=173–193 |doi=10.1080/08935696.2019.1592408 |s2cid=182382892 |issn=0893-5696}}</ref>
Robert Kurz was born on 24 December 1943 in [[Nuremberg]] to a German working-class family.

Kurz studied [[philosophy]], [[history]] and [[paedagogy]] at the [[university]] of [[Erlangen]] without taking a degree.
Kurz was a co-founder of the magazine ''[[Krisis (magazine)|Marxistische Kritik]]'' (''Marxist Critique'') in 1986 and participated in the creation of the Krisis group, around which [[Wertkritik]] concept was developed.<ref name=":4" /> Until April 2004 Kurz was co-editor of the journal Krisis.<ref name=":4" /> Then, the Krisis group split into two, and Kurz and several others formed a new group, EXIT! (along with the magazine of the same name).<ref name=":4" /> Both sides presented the causes of the split differently: While the Krisis editorial team, which continued under this name after the split, cited Kurz's style of communication, which they found hard to bear, as the cause of the split, the latter and Roswitha Scholz accused the "rest of Krisis," which they called "putschists," of using formal legal means to "seize power" in the editorial team. Documentation of the splitting process as well as the structural and personnel background can be found on the website of Exit! as well as on that of Krisis.
He was a member of the [[Kommunistischer Arbeiterbund Deutschland]], KABD (Communist Workers League of Germany; later, named the [[Marxist–Leninist Party of Germany]]) during the 1970s, but then quit because of his critique of the leadership.<ref>Geschichte der MLPD, II. Teil, 2. Halbband, {{ISBN|3-88021-151-5}}, p. 405.</ref>
In the book ''Die antideutsche Ideologie'' (The Anti-German Ideology), Robert Kurz deliberately polemically confronted what he called the "ideology-critical reductionism" of the Berlin magazine Bahamas. In the course of the inner-left controversy over the Iraq war, Bahamas had spoken out in favor of U.S. intervention. Kurz then accused the so-called "anti-Germans" of militant affirmation of Enlightenment ideals, "Western values," and Bellicism.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kurz |first=Robert |url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/60705282 |title=Die antideutsche Ideologie : vom Antifaschismus zum Krisenimperialismus : Kritik des neuesten linksdeutschen Sektenwesens in seinen theoretischen Propheten |date=2003 |publisher=Unrast |isbn=3-89771-426-4 |edition=1. Aufl |location=Münster |oclc=60705282}}</ref>
Kurz was a co-founder of the magazine ''[[Krisis (magazine)|Marxistische Kritik]]'' (''Marxist Critique'') in 1986 and participated in the creation of the Krisis group, around which [[Wertkritik]] concept was developed.


Robert Kurz distinguished himself through a radical critique of the "labor and class struggle fetish" of traditional (labor movement) Marxism.<ref name=":4" /> The critique of value, which he was instrumental in conceiving, is directed against a sociologically truncated understanding of relations of domination, i.e. against deriving relations of domination exclusively from social relations. Kurz sees in the social role of value (value-socialization) a totalitarian tautology that subordinates ad infinitum the entire physical and social-symbolic world to a single abstract principle of form: the accumulation of "dead labor." Kurz's critical analysis of the "totalitarian" socialization principles of modernity crystallizes in his concept of commodity fetishism.
He died in Nuremberg from the consequences of an operational failure.


Later, the "dissociation theorem" developed by EXIT! editor and philosopher [[Roswitha Scholz]], to whom Kurz was married, occupied an increasingly broad space in Kurz's conception of theory.<ref name=":4" /> This synthesis of the early value critique as well as the post-feminist postulate of a structural difference between the genders currently goes by the name of the "critique of value-dissociation."
==Selected bibliography==


Robert Kurz's best-known publication is ''[[Schwarzbuch Kapitalismus]]'', published in 1999.<ref name=":4" /> (The book was originally meant to have been published as Satanic Mills).<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Leslie |first=Esther |date=2014-12-02 |title=Satanic Mills: On Robert Kurz |url=https://brill.com/view/journals/hima/22/3-4/article-p408_16.xml |journal=Historical Materialism |volume=22 |issue=3–4 |pages=408–423 |doi=10.1163/1569206X-12341374 |issn=1465-4466}}</ref> The weekly newspaper ''Die Zeit'' published two controversial reviews, one of which called the Schwarzbuch "the most important publication of the last 10 years."<ref>{{Cite news |last=Lohmann |date=16 December 1999 |title=Schwarzbuch Kapitalismus |language=German |work=Die Zeit |url=https://www.zeit.de/1999/51/199951.p-kurz_.xml |access-date=21 July 2022}}</ref><ref name=":4" /><ref>{{Cite news |last=Heuser |date=16 December 1999 |title=Schwarzbuch Kapitalismus |language=German |work=Die Zeit |url=https://www.zeit.de/1999/51/199951.p-kurz-contra_.xml |access-date=21 July 2022}}</ref>

A regular contributor to important newspapers, notably in Brazil, and a renowned lecturer, Robert Kurz chose to stay out of universities and other institutions of knowledge, and chose to live a marginal life by working as a proletarian - notably as a cab driver for seven years and above all as a night worker in a print shop for the packaging of the local newspaper.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hernández |first=Guillermo |date=2022-01-24 |title=Robert KURZ, La sustancia del capital, Enclave de Libros, Madrid, 2021, 327 págs. |url=https://revistes.ub.edu/index.php/oximora/article/view/35878 |journal=OXÍMORA Revista Internacional de Ética y Política |pages=141–145 |doi=10.1344/oxi.2022.i20.35878 |issn=2014-7708|doi-access=free }}</ref><ref name=":1" /> In the daily newspaper ''[[Neues Deutschland]]'', Kurz regularly wrote articles in the column Kurz, Nick, Luft & Hickel.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kurz |first=Robert |title=Doppelte Entwertung (nd-aktuell.de) |url=https://www.nd-aktuell.de/artikel/220245.doppelte-entwertung.html |access-date=2022-07-21 |website=www.nd-aktuell.de |language=de}}</ref> This was assigned to the economics department. The other authors involved were [[Harry Nick]], [[Christa Luft]] and [[Rudolf Hickel]]. He also published regularly in the weekly newspaper ''Freitag'' and the Brazilian daily ''Folha de S. Paulo''.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Kurz |first=Robert |date=22 August 1999 |title=Totalitarismo econômico |language=Portuguese |work=Folha de S. Paolo |url=https://www1.folha.uol.com.br/fsp/mais/fs22089916.htm |access-date=22 July 2022}}</ref> He was a member of the PEN Center Germany.

He died in Nuremberg from the consequences of an operational failure.<ref name=":0" />

==Selected bibliography==
===Author===
===Author===
*''The Collapse of Modernization: From the collapse of barracks socialism to the crisis of the world economy'' (1991) {{ISBN|3-8218-4421-3}}
*''The Collapse of Modernization: From the collapse of barracks socialism to the crisis of the world economy'' (1991) {{ISBN|3-8218-4421-3}}
Line 32: Line 38:
*''Bloody Reason: Essays for emancipatory critique of capitalist modernity and its Western values'' (2004) {{ISBN|3-89502-182-2}}
*''Bloody Reason: Essays for emancipatory critique of capitalist modernity and its Western values'' (2004) {{ISBN|3-89502-182-2}}
*''The World Capital: Globalization and internal barriers of modern commodity-producing system'' (2005) {{ISBN|3-89320-085-1}}
*''The World Capital: Globalization and internal barriers of modern commodity-producing system'' (2005) {{ISBN|3-89320-085-1}}
*''Money Without Value: Plans to transform the critique of political economy'' (2012) {{ISBN|978-3-89502-343-9}}
*''[[Money Without Value: Plans to transform the critique of political economy]]'' (2012) {{ISBN|978-3-89502-343-9}}
*''The Substance of Capital (2004-2005), (English ed. Chronos publications'' {{ISBN|9780995609501}}) ''(French ed.''{{ISBN|9782373090598}}'') (Spanish ed.'' {{ISBN|9788412218244}}'')''


==See also==
==See also==
*[[Post-Marxism]]
*[[Exit!]]
*[[Krisis (German magazine)]]
*[[Krisis (German magazine)]]
*[[Manifesto Against Work]]
*[[Moishe Postone]]


==References==
==References==
Line 42: Line 51:


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://libcom.org/tags/robert-kurz Robert Kurz / libcom.org]
* [http://libcom.org/tags/robert-kurz Robert Kurz / - Free texts at - libcom.org]
* [https://exitinenglish.com/authors/robert-kurz/ Robert Kurz / - Free texts at - Exitinenglish.com]

{{Authority control}}
{{Critique of political economy}}{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Kurz, Robert}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kurz, Robert}}
[[Category:1943 births]]
[[Category:1943 births]]
[[Category:2012 deaths]]
[[Category:2012 deaths]]
[[Category:20th-century economists]]
[[Category:20th-century German economists]]
[[Category:20th-century educators]]
[[Category:20th-century German educators]]
[[Category:20th-century essayists]]
[[Category:20th-century German essayists]]
[[Category:20th-century German male writers]]
[[Category:20th-century German male writers]]
[[Category:20th-century German non-fiction writers]]
[[Category:20th-century German philosophers]]
[[Category:20th-century German philosophers]]
[[Category:20th-century historians]]
[[Category:21st-century German economists]]
[[Category:21st-century economists]]
[[Category:21st-century German educators]]
[[Category:21st-century educators]]
[[Category:21st-century German essayists]]
[[Category:21st-century essayists]]
[[Category:21st-century German male writers]]
[[Category:21st-century German male writers]]
[[Category:21st-century German non-fiction writers]]
[[Category:21st-century German philosophers]]
[[Category:21st-century German philosophers]]
[[Category:21st-century historians]]
[[Category:Anti-imperialists]]
[[Category:Anti-capitalists]]
[[Category:Anti-nationalists]]
[[Category:Anti-imperialism]]
[[Category:Anti-nationalism]]
[[Category:Contemporary philosophers]]
[[Category:Critical theorists]]
[[Category:Critical theorists]]
[[Category:Critics of political economy]]
[[Category:Critics of political economy]]
[[Category:Critics of postmodernism]]
[[Category:Critics of postmodernism]]
[[Category:German economists]]
[[Category:German anti-capitalists]]
[[Category:German educators]]
[[Category:20th-century German journalists]]
[[Category:German essayists]]
[[Category:German historians]]
[[Category:German journalists]]
[[Category:German male non-fiction writers]]
[[Category:German male non-fiction writers]]
[[Category:German male writers]]
[[Category:German Marxists]]
[[Category:German Marxists]]
[[Category:German philosophers]]
[[Category:German philosophers of culture]]
[[Category:Philosophers of culture]]
[[Category:Philosophers of economics]]
[[Category:Philosophers of economics]]
[[Category:Philosophers of education]]
[[Category:German philosophers of education]]
[[Category:Philosophers of history]]
[[Category:20th-century German educational theorists]]
[[Category:German philosophers of history]]
[[Category:Philosophers of social science]]
[[Category:Philosophers of social science]]
[[Category:Philosophers of war]]
[[Category:Philosophers of war]]
[[Category:Social commentators]]
[[Category:Social critics]]
[[Category:Social philosophers]]
[[Category:Theorists on Western civilization]]
[[Category:Theorists on Western civilization]]
[[Category:Writers about activism and social change]]
[[Category:Writers about activism and social change]]
[[Category:Writers about globalization]]
[[Category:Writers about globalization]]
[[Category:Critics of work and the work ethic]]

[[Category:Historiographers]]

{{Germany-philosopher-stub}}

Latest revision as of 13:20, 25 August 2024

Kurz on an ATTAC-congress in 2009

Robert Kurz (24 December 1943 – 18 July 2012) was a German philosopher, social critic, journalist and editor of the journal Exit![1] He was one of Germany's most prominent theorists of value criticism.[1][2]

Life and work

[edit]

Robert Kurz was born on 24 December 1943 in Nuremberg to a German working-class family. During his military service he was involved in pacifist propaganda and participated in the "Ostermärschen," protest marches against atomic weapons in the 1960s. Kurz studied philosophy, history and paedagogy at the university of Erlangen without taking a degree. He participated in the "student revolt" in 1968 and took part in the intense discussions within the New Left.[3] He was a member of the Kommunistischer Arbeiterbund Deutschland, KABD (Communist Workers League of Germany; later, named the Marxist–Leninist Party of Germany) during the 1970s, but then quit because of his critique of the leadership.[4] He then multiplied the meetings in view of a renewal of the critical theory, which became concrete in the 1980s with the first attempts of the current of which he was to be the principal founder and theorist, the "critique of value" (Wertkritik).[1]

Starting in the 1980s, Kurz developed a fundamental critique of the basic forms of socialization in the modern world - based on the question of the structural causes of the inefficient Eastern bloc economy. He turned against the uncritical affirmation of the concept of labor by the Marxist workers' movement.[1] His book Der Kollaps der Modernisierung (The Collapse of Modernization), published by Eichborn-Verlag in 1991, unfolds a theory of the collapse of modern world society, which assumes that, due to rationalization processes, wage labor is gradually disappearing and that the system as a whole is heading toward a "barbaric end."[1] As in his later works, Kurz offers an outlook on a society that is no longer based on money-mediated commodity exchange. In order to overcome the crisis, he argues, a "sensual reason" is indispensable that is capable of seeing and using things outside their historically conditioned commodity character. As well as a categorical critique of the ontological categories of modernity.[5]

Kurz was a co-founder of the magazine Marxistische Kritik (Marxist Critique) in 1986 and participated in the creation of the Krisis group, around which Wertkritik concept was developed.[1] Until April 2004 Kurz was co-editor of the journal Krisis.[1] Then, the Krisis group split into two, and Kurz and several others formed a new group, EXIT! (along with the magazine of the same name).[1] Both sides presented the causes of the split differently: While the Krisis editorial team, which continued under this name after the split, cited Kurz's style of communication, which they found hard to bear, as the cause of the split, the latter and Roswitha Scholz accused the "rest of Krisis," which they called "putschists," of using formal legal means to "seize power" in the editorial team. Documentation of the splitting process as well as the structural and personnel background can be found on the website of Exit! as well as on that of Krisis.

In the book Die antideutsche Ideologie (The Anti-German Ideology), Robert Kurz deliberately polemically confronted what he called the "ideology-critical reductionism" of the Berlin magazine Bahamas. In the course of the inner-left controversy over the Iraq war, Bahamas had spoken out in favor of U.S. intervention. Kurz then accused the so-called "anti-Germans" of militant affirmation of Enlightenment ideals, "Western values," and Bellicism.[6]

Robert Kurz distinguished himself through a radical critique of the "labor and class struggle fetish" of traditional (labor movement) Marxism.[1] The critique of value, which he was instrumental in conceiving, is directed against a sociologically truncated understanding of relations of domination, i.e. against deriving relations of domination exclusively from social relations. Kurz sees in the social role of value (value-socialization) a totalitarian tautology that subordinates ad infinitum the entire physical and social-symbolic world to a single abstract principle of form: the accumulation of "dead labor." Kurz's critical analysis of the "totalitarian" socialization principles of modernity crystallizes in his concept of commodity fetishism.

Later, the "dissociation theorem" developed by EXIT! editor and philosopher Roswitha Scholz, to whom Kurz was married, occupied an increasingly broad space in Kurz's conception of theory.[1] This synthesis of the early value critique as well as the post-feminist postulate of a structural difference between the genders currently goes by the name of the "critique of value-dissociation."

Robert Kurz's best-known publication is Schwarzbuch Kapitalismus, published in 1999.[1] (The book was originally meant to have been published as Satanic Mills).[7] The weekly newspaper Die Zeit published two controversial reviews, one of which called the Schwarzbuch "the most important publication of the last 10 years."[8][1][9]

A regular contributor to important newspapers, notably in Brazil, and a renowned lecturer, Robert Kurz chose to stay out of universities and other institutions of knowledge, and chose to live a marginal life by working as a proletarian - notably as a cab driver for seven years and above all as a night worker in a print shop for the packaging of the local newspaper.[10][3] In the daily newspaper Neues Deutschland, Kurz regularly wrote articles in the column Kurz, Nick, Luft & Hickel.[11] This was assigned to the economics department. The other authors involved were Harry Nick, Christa Luft and Rudolf Hickel. He also published regularly in the weekly newspaper Freitag and the Brazilian daily Folha de S. Paulo.[12] He was a member of the PEN Center Germany.

He died in Nuremberg from the consequences of an operational failure.[2]

Selected bibliography

[edit]

Author

[edit]
  • The Collapse of Modernization: From the collapse of barracks socialism to the crisis of the world economy (1991) ISBN 3-8218-4421-3
  • Honecker's Revenge: On the political economy of the reunified Germany (1991) ISBN 3-923118-62-7
  • Potemkin's Return: Dummy capitalism and distribution war in Germany (1993) ISBN 3-923118-28-7
  • The Last One Turns Off the Light: On the crisis of democracy and market economy (1993) ISBN 3-923118-88-0
  • The World as Will and Design: Postmodernism, lifestyle Left and the aestheticization of the crisis (1999) ISBN 3-89320-024-X
  • The Black Book of Capitalism: A Farewell to the Market Economy (1999) ISBN 3-8218-0491-2
  • Read Marx: The most important texts of Karl Marx for the 21st Century (2000) ISBN 3-8218-1644-9
  • World Order War: The End of Sovereignty and the changes of imperialism in the era of globalization (2003) ISBN 3-89502-149-0
  • The Anti-German Ideology (2003) ISBN 3-89771-426-4
  • Bloody Reason: Essays for emancipatory critique of capitalist modernity and its Western values (2004) ISBN 3-89502-182-2
  • The World Capital: Globalization and internal barriers of modern commodity-producing system (2005) ISBN 3-89320-085-1
  • Money Without Value: Plans to transform the critique of political economy (2012) ISBN 978-3-89502-343-9
  • The Substance of Capital (2004-2005), (English ed. Chronos publications ISBN 9780995609501) (French ed.ISBN 9782373090598) (Spanish ed. ISBN 9788412218244)

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Bolt, Mikkel; Routhier, Dominique (26 April 2007). "Kritisk teori som radikal krise teori: Kurz, Krisis og Exit! om værdikritik, kapitalismens krise og sammenbrud". Arbejderhistorie: Tidskrift for Historie, Kultur og Politik (2014) (Peer reviewed journal) (in Danish) (2): 77–93. ISSN 0107-8461 – via University of Copenhagen.
  2. ^ a b "Erneuerer des Marxismus: Robert Kurz ist tot" Spiegel Online. 20 July 2012. Retrieved on 6 September 2012.
  3. ^ a b UTOPIE kreativ, Heft 121/122 (November/Dezember 2000), S. 1133-1155.
  4. ^ Geschichte der MLPD, II. Teil, 2. Halbband, ISBN 3-88021-151-5, p. 405.
  5. ^ Rasmussen, Mikkel Bolt; Routhier, Dominique (2019-04-03). "Critical Theory as Radical Crisis Theory: Kurz, Krisis, and Exit! on Value Theory, the Crisis, and the Breakdown of Capitalism". Rethinking Marxism. 31 (2): 173–193. doi:10.1080/08935696.2019.1592408. ISSN 0893-5696. S2CID 182382892.
  6. ^ Kurz, Robert (2003). Die antideutsche Ideologie : vom Antifaschismus zum Krisenimperialismus : Kritik des neuesten linksdeutschen Sektenwesens in seinen theoretischen Propheten (1. Aufl ed.). Münster: Unrast. ISBN 3-89771-426-4. OCLC 60705282.
  7. ^ Leslie, Esther (2014-12-02). "Satanic Mills: On Robert Kurz". Historical Materialism. 22 (3–4): 408–423. doi:10.1163/1569206X-12341374. ISSN 1465-4466.
  8. ^ Lohmann (16 December 1999). "Schwarzbuch Kapitalismus". Die Zeit (in German). Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  9. ^ Heuser (16 December 1999). "Schwarzbuch Kapitalismus". Die Zeit (in German). Retrieved 21 July 2022.
  10. ^ Hernández, Guillermo (2022-01-24). "Robert KURZ, La sustancia del capital, Enclave de Libros, Madrid, 2021, 327 págs". OXÍMORA Revista Internacional de Ética y Política: 141–145. doi:10.1344/oxi.2022.i20.35878. ISSN 2014-7708.
  11. ^ Kurz, Robert. "Doppelte Entwertung (nd-aktuell.de)". www.nd-aktuell.de (in German). Retrieved 2022-07-21.
  12. ^ Kurz, Robert (22 August 1999). "Totalitarismo econômico". Folha de S. Paolo (in Portuguese). Retrieved 22 July 2022.
[edit]