Title: Karl Marx (1818-1883)
1Karl Marx (1818-1883)
2Karl Marx A Short Biography
- born 1818 in Trier
- Educated at U of Bonn, U of Berlin
- The Young Hegelians
- Blacklisted by German universities
- Journal editor
- Jenny Westphalen
- 1843 move to Paris
3Karl Marx Bio (contd)
- Exposure to French socialism
- Friedrich Engels
- troubles expulsion from France
- Brussels
- Communist Manifesto (1848)
- Uprisings of 1848
- London early troubles
4Karl Marx Bio (contd)
- Das Kapital (Capital), vol. 1 (1867)
- Financial stability
- The International
- Death in 1883
5Estranged Labor
- What is this essay about?
- What is Marxs main message or argument?
6Marxs General Approach
- Materialism vs. Idealism
- Dialectical understanding of history
- Dialectical Materialism
7Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844
- Response to political economists Adam Smith,
David Ricardo - Question and analyze what their approach takes
for granted private property, labor and profit,
division of labor - Class is a central category for Marx
- Nature of inequality
8Estranged Labor
- Main point dehumanizing effect of capitalism on
workers - Workers as commodities
- Objectification of labor
- 4 dimensions of estranged labor
9Types of Alienation
- Alienation from work product
- Alienation from work process
- Alienation from species being
- Alienation from other people
10Private Property and Wage Labor
- Interdependence of wage labor and private
property wage labor makes private property
possible, and the system of private property
makes wage labor possible.
11Communist Manifesto
- Social theory
- Call to action
- Powerful political writing
12Marx and Engels
- Not on the sidelines
- Marxs rejection of the traditional philosophical
stance - Role of theory in social change
- Political party formation is not the point
13CM Main Points
- Historyclass struggle
- Crisis tendencies of capitalism
- Alienation of workers
- Emergence of the proletarians as a united class
- Bourgeoisie produces its own grave-diggers
14CM Main Points
- Communist aims
- Formation of proletariat class
- Overthrow of bourgeoisie
- Political power
- Theoryabolition of private property
- Contrast between capitalism and communism
- Steps toward communism
- End point classless society
15Marxs Weaknesses
- Predictions for capitalism were wrong
- Vague on the details of the socialist future
- Next class assessment of strengths and
weaknesses of his theory
16Why Capitalism Hasnt Fallen
- Labor theory of value is wrong
- Rise of professional-managerial class
- Rise of welfare state
- Postindustrial society?
17Industrial vs. Postindustrial Society
18Why Capitalism Hasnt Fallen
- Labor theory of value is wrong
- Rise of professional-managerial class
- Rise of welfare state
- Postindustrial society?
- No proletariat revolt why?
19Capitalism The End of History?
- Current strength, global spread, lack of
worldwide economic crises, lack of widespread
worker revolt - But . . . emerging movement against global
capitalism, and continuing environmental concerns
20Max Weber (1864-1920)
21Webers Life and Times
- Family background
- Early adulthood
- Germanys power
- 1897 personal turning point
22Webers Life and Times
- Protestant Ethic
- Founder of sociology
- World War I
- Economy Society
- Post-war years
23Webers Approach to Sociology
- Scientific study of social action
- Definition of social action
- Types of social action
- Affectual
- Traditional
- Instrumentally-rational
- Value-rational
24Webers Approach to Sociology
- Role of values
- Verstehen interpretive understanding
- Complex causality
- Comparative-historical approach
- Ideal types
25Rationalization
- Most important theme in Webers work
- Definition of rationalization
- Types of rationality
- Practical
- Theoretical
- Substantive
- Formal
26Rationalization
- Key distinction instrumental vs. substantive
- Increase and spread of formal rationality through
bureaucracy - Unintended consequences of instrumental
rationality - Webers pessimism
27The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
- Emergence of bourgeois capitalism
- Role of Protestants in European economy
- Protestant religious doctrine
- Luther calling
- Calvin predestination
- Comparison to Marx
28The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
- Religion as one factor (complex causality)
- Role of ideas switchman metaphor
- Spirit of capitalism outlives religious doctrine
29Bureaucracy
- Ultimate tool of formal rationality
- Spread of bureaucracy spread of formal
rationality (rationalization)
30Characteristics of Bureaucracies
- Rule-bound conduct
- Jurisdictions
- Hierarchy
- Specialized training/staff
- Staff not owners
- Separation of organization and personal property
- Separation of office and living space
- Rights of offices, not incumbents
- Written records of acts, decisions, etc.
31Characteristics of Administrative Staff
- Personally free
- Contractual relationships/free selection
- Selection on technical qualifications
- Fixed salaries, graded by rank
- Sole or primary occupation
- Career
- Strict, systematic discipline and control
32Consequences of Bureaucratic Domination
- Social levelling
- Tendency to plutocracy
- Spirit of formalistic impersonality equality of
treatment - without hatred or passion, and hence without
affection or enthusiasm
33Advantages of Bureaucracy
- Efficiency
- Predictability
- Calculability
- Control (through substitution of nonhuman
technology for human judgment)
34Negative Effects of Bureaucracy
- On customers/clients
- On workers
- On society
35Comparing Weber and Marx
- Similarities
- Comparative-historical approach
- Concerns about impact of modernization
(alienation the iron cage) - Concerns about materialistic values under
capitalism (commodity fetishism Protestant
ethic)
36Comparing Weber and Marx
- Differences
- Optimism vs. pessimism
- Class struggle vs. rationalization
- Materialist account vs. complex causality
- Class vs. Class, Status and Party
37Emile Durkheim, 1858-1917
38Durkheims Life Times
- Born 1858, Epinal close-knit family
- 1879 Ecole Normale Superieure
- Social and political context
- 1885 Trip to Germany
- Writings on methodology The Rules of the
Sociological Method (1895)
39Durkheims Life Times
- 1887 Position at University of Bordeaux The
Division of Labor in Society (1893) - Suicide (1897)
- 1902 Position at the Sorbonne
- The Elementary Forms of Religious Life (1912)
40Durkheims Life Times
- World War I loss of son
- Stroke in 1916, death in 1917
41Durkheims Approach to Sociology
- Rejection of methodological individualism
need to study groups, societies - Social Realism
- Society as constraint
- Social Facts
- Need for separate discipline for study of society
42The Division of Labor in Society
- What holds societies together?
- Durkheims argument shared moral framework
- Spencer, Principles of Sociology social
cooperation based on rational self-interest - Durkheim rational action presupposes moral
framework - Rational action rests on nonrational foundation
43The Division of Labor in Society
- Increasing division of labor
- Cause increasing volume and density of
population - Functionalist argument
- Social solidarity?
- Shift from mechanical to organic solidarity
44Mechanical Solidarity
- Same activities, same beliefs
- Individual consciousness has two components
- Collective Conscience
- Mechanical solidarity CC takes up almost all of
individual consciousness - Why mechanical?
45Organic Solidarity
- High division of labor, solidarity through mutual
dependence - People not as similar
- Why organic?
- Receding place of collective conscience in
individual consciousness
46Laws as Indicators
- Low division of labor/mechanical solidarity ?
repressive laws - High division of labor/organic solidarity ?
restitutive laws
47Suicide (1897)
- Thinking about suicide
- Durkheim social causes
- Study approach social structure and suicide rates
48Suicide (1897)
- Rejection of popular explanations (mental
illness, climate) - Durkheims alternative social structure
- Integration
- Regulation
49Types of Suicide
- Low integration ? Egoistic suicide
- High integration ? Altruistic suicide
- Low regulation ? Anomic suicide
- High regulation ? Fatalistic suicide
50Method and Findings
- Method country-level data
- Findings
- Religion
- Marriage
- Children
- Family size
- Wars and crises
- Economic booms and busts
51Problems of Study
- Logical flaws
- Design flaw ecological fallacy
- Sexist assumptions and conclusions
- Significance Large-scale empirical effort to
show effects of social structure
52Feminist Theory
- Feminism, feminist theory, feminist research
- Tensions
- Theorizing Gender
53What Is Feminism?
- Gender as a social construction
- Gender as a site of power relations
- Concern with social justice
54Variants of Feminism
- Liberal or Equality Feminism
- Socialist/Radical Feminism
- Cultural Feminism
- Feminism is both an intellectual and a
social/political movement
55What Is Feminist Theory?
- Interdisciplinary
- Woman-centered
- Critical
- Interested in social change
56Trends Toward Fragmentation
- Internal critiques
- Influence of poststructural and postmodernist
thought - Questioning the privileging of gender as category
of analysis - Moving past the sex/gender distinction
- Attention to intersectionality
57What Is Feminist Research Practice?
- Rejection of positivism
- Feminist alternative
- Researcher as situated and embodied
- Priority to female and other marginalized
experiences and viewpoints - Interest in interpretive approaches (induction)
- Commitment to empowering research subjects
58Standpoint Theory (Smith reading)
- Womens lives as starting point for theorizing
- Epistemic advantage of socially disadvantaged
- Move outside relations of ruling
59Central Concepts of D. Smith
- Bifurcated consciousness
- Relations of Ruling
60Sites of Tension
- Relationship between feminist theory and
political practice - Core assumptions of feminist vs. postmodernist
theory - Death of the subject
- Death of history
- Death of philosophy
61Theorizing Gender
- Part of more general interest in theorizing
identities - Parallels social movements dominant in last
several decades
62Doing Gender (West Zimmerman, 1987)
- Gender as something people do
- Gender is done in context of interaction
- Sex, sex category, and gender
- Sex biological criteria for male/female
- Sex category presumes sex, but can vary
independently - Gender managing conduct in light of what is
normative for ones sex category
63Doing Gender (West Zimmerman, 1987)
- Accountability for gender performances
- Criteria for judgment vary across contexts and
interactions - Gender tends to reproduce itself
64Time on Household and Family Care