The several social theories that emphasize social
conflict have roots in the ideas of Karl Marx (1818-1883), the great German
theorist and political activist. The Marxist, conflict approach emphasizes a
materialist interpretation of history, a dialectical method of analysis, a
critical stance toward existing social arrangements, and a political program of
revolution or, at least, reform.
The materialist view of history starts from the
premise that the most important determinant of social life is the work people
are doing, especially work that results in provision of the basic necessities
of life, food, clothing and shelter. Marx thought that the way the work is
socially organized and the technology used in production will have a strong
impact on every other aspect of society. He maintained that everything of value
in society results from human labor. Thus, Marx saw working men and women as
engaged in making society, in creating the conditions for their own existence.
Marx summarized the key elements of this materialist
view of history as follows:
In the social production of their existence, men
inevitably enter into definite relations, which are independent of their will,
namely relations of production appropriate to a given stage in the development
of their material forces of production. The totality of these relations of
production constitutes the economic structure of society, the real foundation,
on which arises a legal and political superstructure and to which correspond
definite forms of social consciousness. The mode of production of material life
conditions the general process of social, political and intellectual life. It
is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their
social existence that determines their consciousness (Marx 1971:20).
Marx divided history into several stages, conforming
to broad patterns in the economic structure of society. The most important
stages for Marx's argument were feudalism, capitalism, and socialism. The bulk
of Marx's writing is concerned with applying the materialist model of society
to capitalism, the stage of economic and social development that Marx saw as
dominant in 19th century Europe. For Marx, the central institution of
capitalist society is private property, the system by which capital (that is,
money, machines, tools, factories, and other material objects used in
production) is controlled by a small minority of the population. This
arrangement leads to two opposed classes, the owners of capital (called the
bourgeoisie) and the workers (called the proletariat), whose only property is
their own labor time, which they have to sell to the capitalists.
Owners are seen as making profits by paying workers
less than their work is worth and, thus, exploiting them. (In Marxist
terminology, material forces of production or means of production include
capital, land, and labor, whereas a social relation of production refers to the
division of labor and implied class relationships.)
Economic exploitation leads directly to political
oppression, as owners make use of their economic power to gain control of the
state and turn it into a servant of bourgeois economic interests. Police power,
for instance, is used to enforce property rights and guarantee unfair contracts
between capitalist and worker. Oppression also takes more subtle forms:
religion serves capitalist interests by pacifying the population;
intellectuals, paid directly or indirectly by capitalists, spend their careers
justifying and rationalizing the existing social and economic arrangements. In
sum, the economic structure of society molds the superstructure, including
ideas (e.g., morality, ideologies, art, and literature) and the social
institutions that support the class structure of society (e.g., the state, the
educational system, the family, and religious institutions). Because the
dominant or ruling class (the bourgeoisie) controls the social relations of
production, the dominant ideology in capitalist society is that of the ruling
class. Ideology and social institutions, in turn, serve to reproduce and
perpetuate the economic class structure. Thus, Marx viewed the exploitative
economic arrangements of capitalism as the real foundation upon which the
superstructure of social, political, and intellectual consciousness is built.
(Figure 1 depicts this model of historical materialism.)
Marx's view of history might seem completely cynical
or pessimistic, were it not for the possibilities of change revealed by his
method of dialectical analysis. (The Marxist dialectical method, based on
Hegel's earlier idealistic dialectic, focuses attention on how an existing
social arrangement, or thesis, generates its social opposite, or antithesis,
and on how a qualitatively different social form, or synthesis, emerges from
the resulting struggle.) Marx was an optimist. He believed that any stage of
history based on exploitative economic arrangements generated within itself the
seeds of its own destruction. For instance, feudalism, in which land owners
exploited the peasantry, gave rise to a class of town-dwelling merchants, whose
dedication to making profits eventually led to the bourgeois revolution and the
modern capitalist era. Similarly, the class relations of capitalism will lead
inevitably to the next stage, socialism. The class relations of capitalism
embody a contradiction: capitalists need workers, and vice versa, but the
economic interests of the two groups are fundamentally at odds. Such
contradictions mean inherent conflict and instability, the class struggle.
Adding to the instability of the capitalist system are the inescapable needs
for ever-wider markets and ever-greater investments in capital to maintain the
profits of capitalists. Marx expected that the resulting economic cycles of
expansion and contraction, together with tensions that will build as the
working class gains greater understanding of its exploited position (and thus
attains class consciousness), will eventually culminate in a socialist
revolution.
Despite this sense of the unalterable logic of
history, Marxists see the need for social criticism and for political activity
to speed the arrival of socialism, which, not being based on private property,
is not expected to involve as many contradictions and conflicts as capitalism.
Marxists believe that social theory and political practice are dialectically
intertwined, with theory enhanced by political involvement and with political
practice necessarily guided by theory. Intellectuals ought, therefore, to
engage in praxis, to combine political criticism and political activity. Theory
itself is seen as necessarily critical and value-laden, since the prevailing
social relations are based upon alienating and dehumanizing exploitation of the
labor of the working classes.
Marx's ideas have been applied and reinterpreted by
scholars for over a hundred years, starting with Marx's close friend and
collaborator, Friedrich Engels (1825-95), who supported Marx and his family for
many years from the profits of the textile factories founded by Engels' father,
while Marx shut himself away in the library of the British Museum. Later,
Vladimir I. Lenin (1870-1924), leader of the Russian revolution, made several
influential contributions to Marxist theory. In recent years Marxist theory has
taken a great variety of forms, notably the world-systems theory proposed by
Immanuel Wallerstein (1974, 1980) and the comparative theory of revolutions put
forward by Theda Skocpol (1980). Marxist ideas have also served as a starting
point for many of the modern feminist theorists. Despite these applications,
Marxism of any variety is still a minority position among American sociologists.
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