Marxism Theory

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AQA Sociology A Level Theory

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20 Terms

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Historical Materialism
What your relationship is to the means of production
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Primitive communism
Early classless society
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3 successive class societies
* Ancient society, slaves and owners
* Feudal society, serfs tied to the land
* Capitalist society, wage labourers and bourgeoisie
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Contradiction of capitalism
Capitalists pay the lowest wages possible, causing immiseration of the proletariat yet capitalism requires them to buy in order to keep the economy working
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Alienation
Result of our loss of control over our work and its products, causing separation
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Marx’s view of class EVAL
Ignores Weberian theory, status and power differences can also be important sources of inequality

Feminists believe that gender is a more fundamental source of inequality than class

Marx’s two-class model is simplistic- Weber subdivides into skilled and unskilled classes
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Economic determinism EVAL
Economic determinism fails to recognise that humans have free will
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Humanistic Marxism
Some similarities with action theories and interpretive sociology
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Structuralist Marxism
Structural approach and has similarities with positivist sociology
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Gramsci (Humanist)
Proletariat must develop its own ‘counter-hegemony’ to win the leadership of society from the bourgeoisie

Rejects economic determinism
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Hegemony
Ideological and moral leadership- how the ruling class maintains its position

Coercion

Consent
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Coercion
Uses the army, police, prisons and courts of the capitalist state to force other classes to accept its rule
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Consent (hegemony)
It uses ideas and values to persuade the subordinate classes that its rule is legitimate
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Why is the hegemony of the ruling class never complete
* Ruling class are a minority, they must make alliances with other groups. They must make compromises to take account of the interests of their allies
* The proletariat have a dual consciousness. They can ‘see through’ the dominant ideology to some degree
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Gramsci EVAL
* Over emphasises the role of ideas and under-emphasises the role of both state coercion and economic factors
* Willis, working class lads ‘partially penetrating’ bourgeoisie ideology
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Althusser (Structuralist)
Rejects Marx’s superstructure. In his model:

* Economic level
* Political level
* Ideological level
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Repressive State Apparatuses
Army, police, prisons

Coerce the working class into complying with the will of the bourgeoisie
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Ideological State Apparatuses
Media, education system, family

Ideologically manipulate the working class into accepting capitalism as legitimiate
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Althusser EVAL
This approach discourages political activism because it stresses that individuals can do little

Ignores the fact that it is the active struggles of the working class that can change society

Major influence on postmodernism
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Flexible accumulation (Postmodernist Marxism)
Post-Fordism

Involved the use of technology, an expanded service and finance sector, job insecurity and the requirement for workers to be flexible to fit their employers needs

Permits the production of customised products for small markets instead of standardised products for mass market, and easy switching from one product to another

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