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Marxism 2: Ideology

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Title: Marxism 2: Ideology


1
Marxism 2 Ideology Hegemony
Althusser, Louis (1918-1990)

Antonio Gramsci(1891-1937)
2
Marxism Topics Schools on Focus
Vulgar Marxism Karl Marx Dialectic Materialism, Class Commodification
Western Marxists Althussers theory of Ideology Gramscis Hegemony Literature Society
American British Marxism Jameson and Eagleton Marxist Literary Criticism
Foucault ???????????? Literature as Discourse
3
Outline
  • Marx Q A
  • A. Superstructure and Base Debates and Related
    Issues
  • B. Ideology
  • Ideology defined
  • L. Althusser
  • Examples of Ideology
  • C. Social Structure vs. Social Formation and
    Over-Determination
  • D. A Marxist Reading More Examples for Analysis
  • The Great Gastby (excerpt)
  • A. Gramsci
  • Examples of hegemony
  • References and for next time

?
?
?
?
4
Marx Q A
  • What is materialist determinism? (chap 5 82-)
  • What are the evils of capitalism according to
    Marx? (e.g. chap 5 83 chap 6 83)
  • Is class relationor relation of productionstill
    relevant today?
  • Why do we desire more than we need? Why are
    commodities fetishized?

5
Superstructure vs. Economic Basein the History
of Marxism
  • Marx, Lenin ? Stalins politicization of
    literature
  • Marx, Lenin ? Western Marxism (e.g. Lukacs,
    Brecht, Benjamin, Adorno)
  • (chap 5 84 chap 6 84)
  • Poststructuralist Marxism -- Althusser
  • Neo-Marxists use of Gramsci
  1. (lit. as propaganda)
  2. Realism vs. Modernism debate their critique of
    culture industry and belief in human agency
    (variations of reflectionism)
  3. Over-determination
  4. Conflicting Hegemonies

6
Literature Society (1)
  • Literature of Commitment Reflectionism (chap 5
    87-89)
  • Functions criticizing the wrong, and bringing
    changes. (critics as a warning system or a
    mentor)
  • Mode realism as a prefer genre? (88)
  • Related questions about political correctness
  • -- What are the functions of literature?
  • -- Is good literature politically committed
    literature?
  • -- Does literature have to reflect its society,
    or help promote a certain political cause? (e.g.
    The Education of Little Tree ref. Forrest Carter
    1, 2)
  • -- On the other hand, can literature or art works
    be completely un-political or negative?

7
Literature Society (2)
  • Ways of reflecting society indirectly
  • not through content but through forms (e.g.
    fragmentary form as a way to reflect social
    fragmentation)
  • incorporating different ideologies
  • the political unconscious.

8
Are we blind to our own ideologies?
  • Why?

9
Ideology Defined
  • rigid set of ideas e.g. somebody refrains from
    eating meat for practical rather than
    ideological reasons. ???????? -(general usage)
    negative
  • ruling ideology legitimating the power of the
    dominant group (Marx) negative (chap 5 86)
  • sets of ideas to justify certain organized social
    actions --could be positive or negative (? like
    hegemony) (chap 5 86)
  • sets of ideas to misrepresent the world (and our
    relations) to us, in order justify certain
    actions while masking their real nature.
    negative ? They look natural. (chap 6
    84-85)

10
Althusser, Louis (1918-1990)
  • Born 1918 in Algiers
  • Joined the Communist Party in Paris in 1948.
  • Attempted to reconcile Marxism with
    Structuralism.
  • Influential works For Marx (1965) and Lenin and
    Philosophy (1969).
  • Note Murdered his wife in 1980, and was confined
    to an asylum till his death in 1990.
  • (source)

11
Althussers Revision of Marxism
  • Ideology
  • Sees Ideology not as just ideas or false
    consciousness (which implies true
    consciousness)
  • Subjectivation Explains both social structure
    and individuals subject position in relation to
    ideology.
  • Social Formation
  • Against reflectionism, argues for Literatures
    relative autonomy from Base it is determined
    by Base in the last instance (ultimately) (more
    later)

12
Why is it natural? Why are we blind?
  • Natural
  • We are born into ideologies, always already
    interpellated as subject (We take different
    subject positions in ideologies.)
  • Ideologies speak to us and for us.
  • Blind
  • ideologies disguise real relations present
    imaginary relations.

13
Ideology Defined by Althusser
  • Subject Being subject to Ideology Ideology has
    the function of constituting individual as
    subjects.
  • (not used) Interpellation a.????(??) the formal
    right of a parliament to submit formal questions
    to the government
  • (used) Interpellation ?the police act of
    interpelling someone a policeman hailing us
    hey you! ? guilty subject. Ref.)
  • Ideology as Misrepresentation Ideology is a
    Representation of the Imaginary Relationship of
    Individuals to their Real Conditions of
    Existence.
  • Systematic Control by Consent Ideology is not
    any idea it should be a system of ideas
    (representation) produced by some institutions
    (state apparatuses ????)
  • (Mis-Representation, or Mis-Recognition from
    Lacans idea of mirror stage. Society produces
    us as subject in its own image. Chap 6 p. 86)
  • (chap 6 85)

14
Ideologies Examples
  • Ideology is not a singular idea it works in a
    system
  • to justify some power, support some relations.
  • Which of the following are part of a certain
    ideology
  • -- produced by some ISA, distorting some reality
    ?
  1. Nationalism patriotism cosmopolitanism used in
    ads
  2. The Taiwanese? populism
  3. Supporting the school as an ISA in patriarchal
    society
  4. Supporting the authorities of a certain Church or
    priest confirmed by church services.
  5. --so the myth of ???? is a mere superstition.
  6. --so I can love anyone Id like.
  7. --so we should not expect men to comfort or
    support others.
  • ????????????????????
  • ???????
  • 2. ???????,???????
  • 3. ????,?????
  • 4. God is truth.
  • 5. The Earth is round.
  • 6. It is human to love.
  • 7. Men are from Mars women from Venus.

15
Social Structureof Vulgar Marxist
  • Ideology the ruling ideas of the ruling class
    imposed on the other classes.
  • Superstructure
  • e.g. Literature of the middle class,
  • of proletariat

Parallel, reflect
Base(as foundation, center) relations of
production, means of production
16
1. Literature/Culture Economic Base
Social Formation for Althusser
  • relatively autonomous from
  • reflect, embody, perform, transform, critique

Social Levels
Multiple Ideologies
2. Social Multiple Causality Over-determination
17
Social Formation -- de-centered
  • State Apparatuses (Repressive Ideological)

??
??
??
ISA
??
RSA
??
??
18
Lit. work Relative autonomous
  • over-determined
  • economic influences mediated (??) through
    various ISAs





Base Base Base Base Base
? ?
19
How do we do a Marxist reading??
  • (ref. chap 5 p. 88-89) Power/Class Relations
    shown in the text, its character relations,
    setting, as well as its background
  • The role of capitalism, workers, commodities
  • ideologies
  • -- identifying them and the social practices
    which support them
  • -- discover contradictions between different
    ideologies

20
Ideology an Artistic Example
  • From Titians Venus of Urbino (1538)

21
Venus of Urbino (1538)
  • Revises Giorgione's The Sleeping Venus (1510)
  • Titians
  • a flesh-and-blood beauty, awake and fully aware
    of the viewer's presence. (ref)
  • An allegory of lustful love (with signs of her
    hand, rose)
  • Celebration of marital love
  • (with signs of praying, white dress, the
    dogloyalty, and myrtle (???)constancy

22
Ideology an Artistic Example
  • To Manets Olympia (1863) pay attention to her
    gaze, her hand, the black woman and the black
    cat.

23
Ideology an Artistic Example
  • Manets Olympia
  • --multiple ideologies
  • sexual capitalism (prostitution) presented, and
    critiqued?
  • -- Not Venus, nor Eve or Danaë, a real
    prostitute
  • -- the womans direct stare and upright pose,
    the strong hand
  • The blackness inscribed as a contrast. (no
    backdrop to suggest any symbolic or mythic depth
    of this space,

24
Ideology some CFs
  • ???

25
Contemporary Ideology of Love stereotypes
  • Love motorcycle or car supporting tolerant and
    strong men vs. wayward or weepy women

26
Commodification of Love no fixed or human
object of love
  • ????-???-???? (cell phone as my dear )
  • ????-i??369??-???? (because the cell phone rate
    is cheap)

27
The Great Gatsby General Introd.
  • Setting in New York City and Long Island in
    1922.
  • 1920 (Roaring 20s) is a time when the American
    society experienced a cultural and lifestyle
    revolution. In the economic arena, the stock
    market boomed, the rich spent money on fabulous
    parties and expensive acquisitions, but they are
    morally irresponsible. (e.g.)
  • Narrator Nick Carraway going to the East as an
    initiation to the world of wealth and corruption.

28
Jordan Bakers carelessness
  • Nick You're a rotten driver, either you ought to
    be more careful or you oughtn't to drive at all.
  • Jordan I am careful.
  • Nick No you're not.
  • Jordan Well, other people are.
  • Nick What's that got to do with it
  • Jordan They'll keep out of my way, It takes two
    to make an accident
  • Nick Suppose you met somebody just as careless
    as yourself?
  • Jordan I hope I never will, I hate careless
    people. That's why I like you.

29
The Great Gatsby General Introd. (2)
  • Symbols East Egg (the rich area for the
    aristocrats) and the West Egg (the newly rich )
    on Long Island, parties, green light and, the
    valley of ashes
  • The eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg blue and
    gigantic--- They look out of no face but,
    instead, from a pair of enormous yellow
    spectacles which pass over a nonexistent nose.

30
The Great Gatsby General Introd. (3)
  • Nick refrain from judgment at the beginning?
    rejecting humans at the end.
  • I would want no more privileged glimpses into
    the human heart. Only my neighbour, Gatsby, would
    be exempt from my reaction. For Gatsby turned
    out all right in the end it is what preyed on
    Gatsby, what foul dust floated in the wake of his
    dream.

31
Gs Passion vs. the Moral Desert Paralysis
  • Foul dust -- undesirable desire
  • Daisy and Toms marriage
  • The superficial parties
  • Toms for Myrtle (his mistress, who fight with
    him all the time)
  • Nicks relationship with Jordan Baker
  • How about Gatsbys love for Daisy?
  • And Nick's interest in Gatsby the bootlegger,
    hoodlum, millionaire and what he represents ? The
    American Dream (green backs Nature)??

32
Literary Example -- The Great Gatsby first
reunion (clip 5100)
  • How are images of romance and money intertwined
    in the first excerpt?
  • Contradiction 1
  • Images of wealth Ds brass buttons, Gs gold
    toilet
  • Images of romance beauty, tears, light, flowers,
  • Images of social power nature Images of
    nature names, guests in Gs mansion ? which
    represents his social power
  • Gs romantic sentiments throwing clothes
    at Daisy

33
Literary Example -- The Great Gatsby first
reunion (clip 5100)
  • Contradiction 2 alienation or splitting of the
    signifiers (their exchange values) from the
    signified (the black market).
  • S-ier (1) Gs house catching light, splendor ?
    S-ied how he earns the money.
  • S-ier (2) Daisys evaluation matters. (Rich
    girls dont marry poor boys)
  • The symbol the green light --1. green pasture,
    2. green light ( Daisy), 3. green bills

34
Literary Example -- The Great Gatsby the past
  • What does the past Daisy mean to Gatsby?
  • He has to go back to the past to sort things out.
  • Images of ascendance (ladder) to life and wonder
    (milk of wonder)
  • Daisy perishable, only an incarnation of
    something else. ? social position or fullness of
    life, or both?
  • Nicks response An elusive rhythm, a fragment of
    lost words (Dream regressive, inarticulate)

35
The Great Gatsby the ending
  • Green light again more important than Daisy
  • And as I sat there brooding on the old, unknown
    world, I thought of Gatsby's wonder when he first
    picked out the green light at the end of Daisy's
    dock. He had come a long way to this blue lawn,
    and his dream must have seemed so close that he
    could hardly fail to grasp it. He did not know
    that it was already behind him, somewhere back in
    the vast obscurity beyond the city, where the
    dark fields of the republic rolled on under the
    night.
  • Gatsby believes in the green light, the orgiastic
    (?????) future that year by year recedes before
    us. It eluded us then, but thats no
    matter--tomorrow we will run faster, stretch our
    arms out farther . . . so we beat on, boats
    against the current, born back ceaselessly into
    the past.

36
The Great Gatsby undesirable desire (2)
  • Daisyactually undesirable, too.
  • G (about Daisy) Her voice is full of money
  • N It was full of moneythat was the
    inexhaustible charm that rose and fell in it, the
    cymbals song of it . . . High in a white palace
    the kings daughter, the golden girl.
  • The undesirable to replace the unnamable.
  • The American Dream for Fitzgerald pure at first
    but polluted by materialism
  • But is American Dream desirable?

37
GG in the context of Modernism(for your
reference)
  • The moderns -- a simultaneity of incongruities
    and paradoxes.
  • Modernism was defined as a time of "refusal"--of
    middle-class pieties, scientific or philosophic
    certainty, propriety, tradition, and faith
    (Hoffman 32-33, 40 qtd Kaplan 145).
  • ? setting up untraditional tradition looking
    for undesirable desire.

38
GG in the context of Modernism(for your
reference 2)
  • Undesirable desire is a guilty pleasure, not a
    mere paradox or incongruity.
  • The trope of undesirable desire provided a covert
    means of getting in on cultural debates over
    national belonging, of participating--through the
    construction of desirable and undesirable love
    objects--in the national debate over who was and
    was not a desirable American and why. (Kaplan
    147) ? American Dream as a means of
    self-justification

39
The Great Gatsby and The Ideology of American
Dream
  • The Dreams Material Base Capitalist pursuit and
    acquisition. (the real condition)
  • Imaginary Relation represented by Gatsby band the
    green light the fallible but desirable? We
    The Americans turn out alright at the end.
  • ? Daisy and Tom, the undesirable.
  • But the problem is that its hard to distinguish
    them from each other.

40
From Ideology to Hegemony
  1. Gramsci considers the role of the organic
    intellectual and competing hegemonies
    (heterogeneous and always being modified).
  2. Hegemony Dominant Ideology, but not always
    controlling us.

41
Antonio Gramsci (1891-1937)
  • Supporter of Russian revolution and activist in
    socialist transformation throughout the advanced
    capitalist world.
  • Arrested in 1926, kept in prison 1928 1937,
    where he wrote the Prison Notebook.

42
Hegemony control by consent
  • Chap 6 88-89)
  • Ideological leadership consensual control
  • "...Dominant groups in society, including
    fundamentally but not exclusively the ruling
    class, maintain their dominance by securing the
    'spontaneous consent' of subordinate groups,
    including the working class, through the
    negotiated construction of a political and
    ideological consensus which incorporates both
    dominant and dominated groups." (Strinati, 1995
    165)
  • (source http//www.theory.org.uk/ctr-gram.htmhege
    )

43
Gramsci hegemony not secure
  • not given to the dominant group, but "has to be
    won, reproduced, sustained."
  • Hegemony can only be maintained so long as the
    dominant classes succeed in framing all competing
    definitions within their range... so that the
    subordinate groups get either controlled or
    contained within an ideological space . . (13
    Norton 2455.)

44
Hegemony examples images of the Blacks
  • Winning spontaneous consent through
    granting of
    superficial 'concessions' (Strinati,1995167 qtd
    Mystry).
  • This involves the dominant group making
    'compromises' that are (or appear as) favourable
    to the dominated group, but that which actually
    do nothing to disrupt the hegemony of the
    dominators.

45
black images
  • I. Three stereotypes Mammy, slaves, clown (e.g.
    TV minstrel show) ?spontaneous consensus to their
    slavery or inferiority.
  • II. Positive images based on normative white
    ideals
  • Images in late 80s e.g.
  • --the middle-class household of
  • The Cosby Show points out that
  • there is 'nothing black' about
  • the Huxtable's lifestyle
  • (Mercer 19896 qtd in Mystry).

46
Strategies of containment
Sympathy shown for the minorities, but with the
whites as the real heroes.
  • Counter Hegemonic Practices e.g. Hip Hop.
  • e.g. Cry Freedom
  • The Last of the Mohicans,
  • Dances with Wolves

47
References
  • Louis Althusser Archive http//www.marxists.org/r
    eference/archive/althusser/
  • Kaplan, Carla Undesirable Desire Citizenship
    and Romance in Modern American Fiction Modern
    Fiction Studies 43.1 (1997) 144-169.
  • An Introduction to Gramsci's Life and
    Thought http//www.marxists.org/archive/gramsci/in
    tro.htm
  • Antonio Gramsci http//www.theory.org.uk/ctr-gram.
    htm
  • Mistry, Reena. Can Gramsci's theory of hegemony
    help us to understand the representation of
    ethnic minorities in western television and
    cinema? http//www.theory.org.uk/ctr-rol6.htm

48
Next time Marxist Literary Criticism
  • (Reader chap 5 chap 6 review)
  • F. Jameson T. Eagleton as a focus.
  • "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock ?
    ideologies of the author, the genre and the time?
  • Find an example of an ideology yourself.
  • Ref.
  • Song Suicided by Society http//www.youtube.com/
    watch?vcQJGhYTh7Rs
  • animation LoveSong of J. Alfred Prufrock Rev.
    Animation http//www.youtube.com/watch?v6LsHkr2b-
    b0
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