Saturday, November 30, 2019
Marxist Theory Essays (5467 words) - Marxist Theory,
  Marxist Theory  Introduction to Marxist theory on history Historical Materialism: the marxist  view of history The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of  class struggles. Freeman and slave, patrician and plebeian, lord and serf,  guild-master and journeyman, in a word, oppressor and oppressed stood in  constant opposition to each other, carried on an uninterrupted, now hidden, now  open fight, a fight that each time ended, either in a revolutionary  reconstitution of society at large or in the mutual ruin of the contending  classes. Karl Marx and Frederick Engels: The Communist Manifesto Section A: How  society works 1. Making sense of history: looking behind the 'story' The ruling  class portrays history as the doings of "great men", the role of  governors and explorers, lists of wars and invasions and other "important  events". History in school books is like a story - a succession of events  without any general pattern. Marxists say that in order to make sense of the  story of history - what people, famous or not, actually did - we have to  understand the overall economic and social context to show why they acted in the  way they did. Take for example the American Civil War of 1861-65. What do most  people know about this war? Northern Americans, the Union, fought against the    Southern Confederates; Bluecoats fought Greycoats. Why? Most people would say,  well, it was about slavery. The Union president, Abraham Lincoln, was against  slavery, while the southerners were in favour of it. That's the myth; the  northerners fighting slavery out of the goodness of their hearts. But Marxists  would say there was a lot more to it than that. In fact the northern  industrialists behind the Union were in bitter conflict with the big southern  farmers who owned the slaves; most of these industrialists were racists and not  very sympathetic to black slaves. The basic causes of the war were in this  economic conflict between the to different sections of the US ruling class.    Let's take the example of the English civil war of 1641-49. Most people know it  was cavaliers against roundheads, parliament versus the crown, Oliver Cromwell  versus Charles 1. But why? Who did parliament represent - whose interests? And  who backed the king, and why? When we investigate this, we find that different  class forces were involved. So, a Marxist analysis of the English civil war  would try to explain the story of the war in terms of the class interests  involved. This method of looking at things to discover the real class and social  interests involved in events, of course is relevant to more contemporary events.    Why did the US president George Bush start the Gulf war? To defend plucky little    Kuwait against the monster Saddam? Marxists say no, this was just the  propaganda; Bush started the war to defend the economic and political interests  of the US, including the oil supplies from the area. Another example of how we  try to look behind the surface events at the real story. So this is the first  idea: Historical materialism is about discovering the class interests which  determine how people act in history. Now read the following quote about the    English civil war from someone who fought in it, and think how it relates to  what we have discussed so far: "A very great part of the knights and  gentlemen of England ... adhered to the King. And most of the tenants of these  gentlemen, and also most of the poorest of the people, whom the others call the  rabble, did follow the gentry and ere for the king. On the Parliament's side  were (besides themselves) the smaller part of the gentry in most of the  counties, and the greatest part of the tradesmen and freeholders and the middle  sort of men, especially in those corporations and counties which depend on such  manufactures". (Colonel Baxter: Autobiography) What Baxter is saying here  is that the conflict was between the king and the aristocracy (supported by  those most dependent on them) on the one hand: and the rising middle classes on  the other. This of course is exactly the Marxist explanation of the Civil War.  (See Christopher Hill: 'The English Revolution 1640'). 2. Different types of  society The type of society we have now - capitalism - only started to come into  existence about 350 years ago, first in Holland and England. But human society  existed for hundreds of thousands of years before that. In societies before  capitalism, the way people lived was different to what we know now. Before  capitalism, in Western    
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