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Karl Marx

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'Historical Materialism is the thesis that there is, throughout history's course, ... Historical materialism is applied to production changes as well as predicting ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Karl Marx


1
Karl MarxClass Struggles in France, 1848-1850
2
Presentation Layout
2
  • Introduction to the text
  • Main Events
  • Marxs Perspective
  • Historical Materialism
  • Additional Academic Comments
  • Summary

3
Introduction to the text
3
  • Describes how and why class struggles are played
    out in France between 1848-1850
  • Marxs first attempt to explain contemporary
    history via material conception
  • Written by Marx 1850 Published by Engels 1895
    with added introduction
  • Links historical analysis with the economic agenda

4
Main Events
4
  • February 1848
  • Revolution against the financial Bourgeoisie,
    ripened by world events that mobilised the Petty
    Bourgeoisie in favour of the Proletariat
  • Ideological republic created to mediate wage
    labour described as illusion and poetry as
    power open to all
  • June 1848
  • Bourgeoisie remain in control of labour power
  • Realised February revolution strengthened the
    bankocracy it aimed to overthrow
  • Proletariat frustration rises at failed
    emancipation and leads to violent uprising
  • Changed meaning of revolution

5
Main Events - Continued
5
  • June 1848 June 1849
  • The Bourgeoisie has no king the true form of
    its rule is the republic
  • Laws to keep the Petty Bourgeoisie (middle
    strata) on the Republics side
  • Variations on a theme i.e. Napoleon Bonaparte
    voted in as thought marginally better than
    existing leader
  • Alliance with European counterrevolution
    protection of capitalism
  • Changed around positions of parties and their
    classes, their separations and connections
  • Consequences of the Events
  • Royalist sentiments and return of bankocracy due
    to state debt
  • Wine tax / Land authority
  • Realised the revolution was not the end, but
    merely the start of class struggles
  • Proletariats need new tactics, behind the
    ballots lie the paving stones

6
Marxs perspective
6
  • Real revolution is only possible when the modern
    forces of production and the Bourgeois forms of
    production come into opposition with each other
  • Reactionary attempts to prevent Bourgeois
    development will just rebound
  • We need to delve further into the ideas of
    Historical Materialism to make sense of societal
    events

7
Historical Materialism
7
  • Historical Materialism is the framework used by
    Marx to examine society
  • A conflict thesis associated with class struggles
    (as depicted in text)
  • Historical Materialism is the thesis that there
    is, throughout historys course, a tendency
    towards growth of productive power, and that
    forms of society rise and fall when they promote
    or impede that growth (Cohen, 2000364)
  • Capitalism as a social fact linked to the
    division of labour how it changes over time is
    described by Marxs conception of Historical
    Materialism
  • The text demonstrates how the ruling class use
    the states productive forces to enforce their
    preferred production relations to exploit the
    masses. Therefore, the working classes become
    alienated as they are deprived of what is needed
    to become influential.
  • Historical materialism is applied to production
    changes as well as predicting future societal
    transformations leading, it says, to a working
    class revolution (Marx Engels, 1998)
  • Therefore, the concept historically
    contextualises economic relations in order to
    further the Marxist political project

8
Additional Academic Comments
8
  • Not all Sociologists agree with Marxs
    application of Historical Materialism (HM)
  • Not HM but a Spirit of Capitalism (Weber 1965)
  • HM out of date in basic form (Giddens 1985)
  • HM over-deterministic (Trougott 2001 Poggi
    2006)
  • HM Imposes itself above and beyond the real
    historical facts, politics merely ad hoc within
    the conception of the relentless historical
    movement towards revolution (Spencer 1979)

9
Summary
9
  • Class Struggles in France Marxs first attempt
    to describe contemporary history via the
    application of HM
  • Events linked to class relations throughout
  • Claimed revolutionary tactics were unsuccessful
    due to economic relations
  • Not all agree with Marxs application of
    historical analysis

10
Thank you for Listening
10
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