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The front matter section in the xml XML contains the information for all roman numbered pages. In general the front matter consist of multiple parts each with a unique id, consisting of FM and a 6-digit number stating with 1 (FM000001, FM000002, etc. The @specific-use="online" determines if a specific part is being listed in the table of contents at brill.com. The following table gives an overview of the general parts of in the front matter. The numbering refers to the XML-sample below.

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Code Block
languagexml
titleFront matter example
	<front-matter>
		<front-matter-part id="FM000001" specific-use="online">
			<book-part-meta>
				<book-part-id book-part-id-type="doi">10.1163/9789004449909_001</book-part-id>
				<title-group>
					<title>Preliminary Material</title>
				</title-group>
				<fpage specific-use="PDF" seq="0">i</fpage>
				<lpage>x</lpage>
				<self-uri content-type="PDF" xlink:href="9789004449909_webready_content_s001.pdf"/>
				<counts>
					<book-page-count count="10"/>
				</counts>
			</book-part-meta>
		</front-matter-part>
		<front-matter-part id="FM000002">
			<named-book-part-body>
				<sec sec-type="heading-1">
					<title>Half Title Page</title>
					<p>Value without Fetish</p>
				</sec>
			</named-book-part-body>
		</front-matter-part>
		<front-matter-part id="FM000003">
			<named-book-part-body>
				<sec sec-type="heading-1">
					<title>Series Page</title>
					<p><bold>Historical Materialism Book Series</bold></p>
					<p><italic>Editorial Board</italic></p>
					<p>Loren Balhorn (<italic>Berlin</italic>)</p>
					<p>David Broder (<italic>Rome</italic>)</p>
					<p>Sebastian Budgen (<italic>Paris</italic>)</p>
					<p>Steve Edwards (<italic>London</italic>)</p>
					<p>Juan Grigera (<italic>London</italic>)</p>
					<p>Marcel van der Linden (<italic>Amsterdam</italic>)</p>
					<p>Peter Thomas (<italic>London</italic>)</p>
					<p><sc>Volume 227</sc></p>
					<p>The titles published in this series are listed at <italic><ext-link xlink:href="brill.com/hm">brill.com/hm</ext-link></italic></p>
				</sec>
			</named-book-part-body>
		</front-matter-part>
		<front-matter-part id="FM000004">
			<named-book-part-body>
				<sec sec-type="heading-1">
					<title>Title Page</title>
					<p><bold>Value without Fetish</bold></p>
					<p><bold>Uno Kōzō’s Theory of ‘Pure Capitalism’ in Light of Marx’s Critique of Political Economy</bold></p>
					<p><italic>By</italic></p>
					<p>Elena Louisa Lange</p>
					<p><sc>BRILL</sc></p>
					<p><sc>LEIDEN | BOSTON</sc></p>
				</sec>
			</named-book-part-body>
		</front-matter-part>
		<front-matter-part id="FM000005" specific-use="online">
			<named-book-part-body>
				<sec sec-type="heading-1">
					<title>Copyright Page</title>
					<p>This is an open access title distributed under the terms of the <sc>CC BY-NC-ND</sc> 4.0 license, which permits any non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided no alterations are made and the original author(s) and source are credited. Further information and the complete license text can be found at https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/. The terms of the <sc>CC</sc> license apply only to the original material. The use of material from other sources (indicated by a reference) such as diagrams, illustrations, photos and text samples may require further permission from the respective copyright holder.</p>
					<p>The open access publication of this book has been published with the support of the Swiss National Science Foundation.</p>
					<p>Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data</p>
					<p>Names: Lange, Elena Louisa, author.</p>
					<p>Title: Value without fetish : Uno Kōzō’s theory of ‘pure capitalism’ in light of Marx’s critique of political economy / by Elena Louisa Lange.</p>
					<p>Description: Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2021] | Series: Historical materialism book series, 1570-1522 ; volume 227 | Includes bibliographical references and index.</p>
					<p>Identifiers: <sc>LCCN</sc> 2021006689 (print) | <sc>LCCN</sc> 2021006690 (ebook) | <sc>ISBN</sc> 9789004297388 (hardback ; alk. paper) | <sc>ISBN</sc> 9789004449909 (ebook)</p>
					<p>Subjects: <sc>LCSH</sc>: Uno, Kōzō, 1897-1977. | Marxian economics. | Capitalism. | Value. | Economics.</p>
					<p>Classification: <sc>LCC HB</sc>126.<sc>J</sc>4 <sc>U</sc>645 2021 (print) | <sc>LCC HB</sc>126.<sc>J</sc>4 (ebook) | <sc>DDC</sc> 335.4/12–dc23</p>
					<p><sc>LC</sc> record available at <ext-link xlink:href="https://lccn.loc.gov/2021006689">https://lccn.loc.gov/2021006689</ext-link></p>
					<p><sc>LC</sc> ebook record available at <ext-link xlink:href="https://lccn.loc.gov/2021006690">https://lccn.loc.gov/2021006690</ext-link></p>
					<p>Typeface for the Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic scripts: “Brill”. See and download: <ext-link xlink:href="brill.com/brill-typeface">brill.com/brill-typeface</ext-link>.</p>
					<p><sc>ISSN</sc> 1570-1522</p>
					<p><sc>ISBN</sc> 978-90-04-29738-8 (hardback)</p>
					<p><sc>ISBN</sc> 978-90-04-44990-9 (e-book)</p>
					<p>Copyright 2021 by Elena Louisa Lange.</p>
					<p>Copyright 2021 by Elena Louisa Lange. Published by Koninklijke Brill <sc>NV</sc>, Leiden, The Netherlands.</p>
					<p>Koninklijke Brill <sc>NV</sc> incorporates the imprints Brill, Brill Nijhoff, Brill Hotei, Brill Schöningh, Brill Fink, Brill mentis, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Böhlau Verlag and V&R Unipressunipress.</p>
					<p>Koninklijke Brill <sc>NV</sc> reserves the right to protect this publication against unauthorized use. Requests for re-use and/or translations must be addressed to Koninklijke Brill <sc>NV</sc> via brill.com or copyright.com.</p>
					<p>Koninklijke Brill <sc>NV</sc> reserves the right to protect this publication against unauthorized use.</p>
					<p>This book is printed on acid-free paper and produced in a sustainable manner.</p>
				</sec>
			</named-book-part-body>
		</front-matter-part>
		<dedication id="FM000006" specific-use="online">
			<book-part-meta>
				<title-group>
					<title>Dedication</title>
				</title-group>
			</book-part-meta>
			<named-book-part-body>
				<p><italic>To Juno Theodora Lange</italic></p>
				<p><italic>‘Sapere Aude’</italic></p>
			</named-book-part-body>
		</dedication>
		<front-matter-part id="FM000007" specific-use="online">
			<named-book-part-body>
				<sec>
					<title>Motto</title>
					<disp-quote>
						<p>All systems exist because of supply and demand.</p>
						<attrib><sc>Annette Peacock</sc> (1979)</attrib>
					</disp-quote>
					<disp-quote>
						<p>Denn an allem, was sich ändert, haben Kauffrauen investiert.</p>
						<attrib><sc>Cpt. Kirk</sc> &. (1992)</attrib>
					</disp-quote>
				</sec>
			</named-book-part-body>
		</front-matter-part>
		<toc id="FM000008">
			<toc-title-group>
				<title>Contents</title>
			</toc-title-group>
			<toc-entry>
				<title>Acknowledgements</title>
			</toc-entry>
			<toc-entry>
				<title>Note on Translations and Transcriptions</title>
			</toc-entry>
			<toc-entry>
				<label>Part 1</label>
				<title>The Method of <italic>The Critique of Political Economy</italic></title>
				<toc-entry>
					<label>1</label>
					<title>Introduction – Marx’s Critique of Fetishism as Method</title>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>1.1</label>
						<title>The Critique of Fetishism and Uno’s Theory of ‘Pure Capitalism’</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>1.2</label>
						<title>The Aporias of Classical Political Economy</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>1.3</label>
						<title>The Critical Function of Marx’s Labour Theory of Value. Against Some Readings of ‘Form’ in Contemporary Value Form Theory</title>
					</toc-entry>
				</toc-entry>
				<toc-entry>
					<label>2</label>
					<title>What’s ‘Pure’ about Capitalism? Uno’s Three-Level Method and the Theory of Principles</title>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>2.1</label>
						<title>The Limits to the Three Level-Method (<italic>sandankairon</italic>)</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>2.2</label>
						<title>Pure Theory’s X-Axis: The Law of Population</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>2.3</label>
						<title>Pure Theory’s Y-Axis: The Commodification of Labour Power</title>
					</toc-entry>
				</toc-entry>
			</toc-entry>
			<toc-entry>
				<label>Part 2</label>
				<title>The Object of <italic>The Critique of Political Economy</italic></title>
				<toc-entry>
					<label>3</label>
					<title>Uno’s <italic>Theory of Value</italic> – Value without Fetish (1947–69)</title>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>3.1</label>
						<title>The Problem of Abstract Labour in Uno’s Theory of Value</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>3.2</label>
						<title>Uno’s Theory of Value: Methodological Individualism and the Fetishism of Use Value</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>3.3</label>
						<title>Uno’s Theory of Money: Baileyan Assumptions</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>3.4</label>
						<title>Uno’s Theory of Capital: M-C-M’ as Pure Form</title>
					</toc-entry>
				</toc-entry>
				<toc-entry>
					<label>4</label>
					<title>The <italic>Principles of Political Economy</italic> (<italic>Keizai Genron</italic>, 1952/1964) in Light of Marx’s Critique of Political Economy</title>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>4.1</label>
						<title>The Reconstruction of <italic>Capital</italic></title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>4.2</label>
						<title>The Law of Value as the Law of General Social Equilibrium (Uno)</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>4.3</label>
						<title>Surplus Value and Profit: The ‘Transformation Problem’ in Uno’s Perspective</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>4.4</label>
						<title>The Law of Value as the Law of Crisis (Marx)</title>
					</toc-entry>
				</toc-entry>
				<toc-entry>
					<label>5</label>
					<title>Uno’s Legacy in Japan and Beyond</title>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>5.1</label>
						<title>Money vs. Value? The ‘Monetary Approach’ in the Post-Uno School of Value Theory</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>5.2</label>
						<title>The ‘Dialectic of Capital’ as the Apologetic of Capital in the Anglophone Uno School</title>
					</toc-entry>
					<toc-entry>
						<label>5.3</label>
						<title>The Meaning of Real Subsumption or the Real Subsumption of Meaning: Aspects of Anglophone Uno School Historiographies</title>
					</toc-entry>
				</toc-entry>
			</toc-entry>
			<toc-entry>
				<title>References</title>
			</toc-entry>
			<toc-entry>
				<title>Index of Names</title>
			</toc-entry>
			<toc-entry>
				<title>Index of Subjects</title>
			</toc-entry>
		</toc>
		<ack id="FM000009" specific-use="online">
			<title>Acknowledgements</title>
			<p>Many personal thanks to Raji C. Steineck, Riccardo Bellofiore, Patrick Murray, Jeanne Schuler, Fred Moseley, Saitō Kōhei, Agon Hamza, Ingo Stützle, Michael Heinrich, Ingo Elbe, Namiko Holzapfel, Nobutake Kamiya, Mishima Kenichi, Nick Nesbitt, Joshua Pickett-Depaolis, Eric-John Russell, Maren Thom, Jacob Blumenfeld, Christian Uhl, Frank Engster, Werner Bonefeld, Jan Hoff, Andrés Sáenz de Sicilia, and Chris O’Kane.</p>
			<p>Moishe Postone’s and Ōtani Teinosuke’s support, advice and good spirits are painfully missed.</p>
			<p>Thanks to the discussants of the Value-Form Group for being ‘ruthless critics of all that exists’.</p>
			<p>Many thanks to Jan Steiner for his invaluable, and spontaneous, help.</p>
			<p>Special thanks to my patient parents, Horst and Donka.</p>
			<p>Extra special thanks to the love of my life, F.</p>
			<p>A part of the research conducted for this book has been financially supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (<sc>SNSF</sc>).</p>
		</ack>
		<front-matter-part id="FM000010" specific-use="online">
			<named-book-part-body>
				<sec>
					<title>Note on Translations and Transcriptions</title>
					<p>All translations from materials written in languages other than English are ours, unless otherwise indicated. All non-English terms are indicated by italics.</p>
					<p>For transliterations of Japanese, we use the Modified Hepburn System with the macron indication a long vowel, e.g. <italic>ryūtsū-ron</italic>. Terms in Japanese, in particular proper nouns that have an established usage in English (e.g. Tokyo) remain unmodified.</p>
					<p>Japanese names are given in the Japanese order: family name first and given name last (e.g. Uno Kōzō), unless the person’s pen name has been established according to the English custom (e.g. Makoto Itoh instead of Itō Makoto).</p>
				</sec>
			</named-book-part-body>
		</front-matter-part>
	</front-matter>

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