structural Marxism
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structural Marxism
Summary
structural Marxism is a philosophical schools and traditions[1]. It draws 87 Wikipedia views per month (philosophical_schools_and_traditions category, ranking #25 of 63).[2]
Key Facts
- structural Marxism was influenced by structuralism[3].
- structural Marxism's instance of is recorded as philosophical schools and traditions[4].
- structural Marxism's instance of is recorded as philosophical movement[5].
- structural Marxism's instance of is recorded as political philosophy[6].
- structural Marxism's founder is recorded as Louis Althusser[7].
- structural Marxism's part of is recorded as Marxist philosophy[8].
- structural Marxism's part of is recorded as Marxism[9].
- structural Marxism's opposite of is recorded as Marxist humanism[10].
- structural Marxism's country of origin is recorded as France[11].
- +1975-00-00T00:00:00Z marks the founding of structural Marxism[12].
- structural Marxism's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/070t4r[13].
- structural Marxism's described at URL is recorded as http://www.inkrit.de/e_inkritpedia/e_maincode/doku.php?id=a:althusser-schule[14].
- structural Marxism's significant person is recorded as Nikos Poulantzas[15].
- structural Marxism's significant person is recorded as Maurice Godelier[16].
- structural Marxism's Microsoft Academic ID is recorded as 2776356399[17].
- structural Marxism's Encyclopedia of China is recorded as 84995[18].
Why It Matters
structural Marxism draws 87 Wikipedia views per month (philosophical_schools_and_traditions category, ranking #25 of 63).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 15 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[19] It is known by 4 alternative names across languages and contexts.[20]