"Ruy Mauro Marini (1932-97) was perhaps the most important founder of Marxist dependency theory, and it is therefore all the more curious that his most important essay, The Dialectics of Dependency, was published in many other languages--but never in English. Amanda Latimer has changed that. May this book be widely studied!"--Marcel van der Linden, International Institute of Social History, Amsterdam
"Translations are the first step towards building broad but unified anti-imperialist struggles in Asia, Africa, Latin America and elsewhere. At long last we have an English translation of Ruy Mauro Marini's seminal work The Dialectics of Dependency, contextualized brilliantly by Amanda Latimer and aided by Jamie Osorio's "Notes on the Dialectics of Dependency." As they navigate this book, which has been informed by a spirit of internationalism, readers may wish to ask: had the text been translated five decades ago, how might it have changed the course of debate on dependency, imperialism and neo-colonialism throughout the Third World? A 'must read' for Marxists and non-Marxists alike."--Radha D'Souza, Professor of Law, University of Westminster
"The Dialectics of Dependency has become a classic of Latin American social thought because it addresses essential issues with an original approach and with a resonance that time has only confirmed."--Emir Sader, coordinator, Encyclopedia Latinoamericana, and author, Lula y la izquierda del siglo XXI, Brazil
"The Dialectics of Dependency is a compelling contribution to the enduring struggle against imperialism over the past 500 years of capitalist development. Ruy Mauro Marini's seminal work has advanced our knowledge of class struggle under conditions of super-exploitation and the imperialist forces which subjugate the global South. Amanda Latimer and Jaime Osorio bring Marini's powerfully influential book to English readers. Essential book for understanding imperialism."--Immanuel Ness, City University of New York
"The Dialectics of Dependency is a classic work of Latin American social thought and an inspiration, even if its author, Ruy Mauro Marini, did not intend to produce a text with this end in mind. It is a text that is linked to a life of struggle and political formation inside and outside of the academy. Almost 50 years after its appearance, the book's theoretical, methodological, and political force calls for both a careful re-reading in even darker times and for boldness in efforts to update it, in response to the dilemmas of our times. Ultimately, inequality, when it prevails, will either be overcome by socialist revolution or will tend, as we have seen, to intensify labor super-exploitation, whether in the center (where it comes to be characterized by more exploitation) or the periphery (where it results in value transfers). In the twenty-first century, the plundering and super-exploitation of the workforce in Latin America and the Caribbean is still going strong in the everyday dynamics of the international division of labor (or, as Marini suggested, capitalism sui generis). The Dialectics of Dependency continues to inspire new generations to understand the theoretical elements that explain the unequal dynamics of international trade. It inspires us to think, with head and feet bound to the social struggle, about the urgent need for revolutionary change. Analyzing history from the Latin American and Caribbean revolutions onwards, and the continuous process of violence against nature and labor in the continent, it demarcates the essential role that this theoretical line of thought, which emerged from and for revolutionary action, can play today. This work represents an exceptional output linked to the life of an extraordinary subject. With the present translation, the English-speaking reader has in his or her hands an important key to explaining the inseparable relationship between imperialism and dependency. Welcome to the battle of ideas inherent to the fertile struggles of the 1960s and 70s in Latin America!"--Roberta Traspadini, Professor in International Relations, Federal University of Latin American Integration (UNILA), Brazil
"Readers have had to wait for almost half a century for publication in English of this ground breaking text by the Brazilian social scientist Ruy Mauro Marini, revealing the North's disregard for social scientists, particularly Marxists, from the South. I do not exaggerate when I say that this book has the potential to profoundly change our understanding of the South's dialectical process of dependency on the North and of the capitalist development of the world system. Marini's text makes a prominent contribution to Marxism as, by developing his Marxist theory of the sui generis dependent capitalism of the South, he also enriches the Marxist analysis of the past and present capitalist development of the North. The two editors, Latimer and Osorio, provide a most useful context to Marini's essay: Osorio, the foremost expert on Marini's work, by expanding aspects of the text's somewhat abstract and synthetic character, by highlighting its contemporary relevance, and by clarifying some misunderstandings and misrepresentations of Marini's critics; and Latimer by analysing Marini's life, work and leading involvement with the Latin American revolutionary politics of his time which forced him into exile from three different countries, Brazil, Mexico and Chile."--Cristóbal Kay, Emeritus Professor, International Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus University Rotterdam