1 / 18

Marxist Criticism

Marxist Criticism. An Introduction. Marxist Critics. Apply the economic/social principles and ideas of Karl Marx to literature.

laksha
Download Presentation

Marxist Criticism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marxist Criticism An Introduction

  2. Marxist Critics • Apply the economic/social principles and ideas of Karl Marx to literature. • Believe that society is based on a dialectic (or conflict) between employers (who own capital) and employees (who sell their labor). The ruling class and workers struggle for economic power. • Believe that the values of capitalism, such as the primacy of profit and consumerism, infuse all aspects of our society.

  3. Marxist Critics • See the individual as a product of society’s value system (The individual is constructed by class and society.) • Emphasize the role of class and labor as they analyze texts.

  4. Grapes of Wrath (1940)

  5. Society • The beliefs, attitudes, and values of a society form an ideological base which influences the superstructure of a society, its laws, politics, religion, education, art, literature, film, urban development, etc. • The ideological base influences the economic base of society, the way the society produces materials, the economic organization of a group: capitalism, socialism, barter and trade.

  6. Base and Superstructure Superstructurelaws, politics, religion, education, art, philosophy, and ethics Base Ideology: system of beliefs, attitudes, and values (material conditions – Capitalism)

  7. Capitalism • Capitalism is the ideological base of the United States and much of Western culture. • Discussion: What are the values and beliefs of capitalism?

  8. Exploitation • One tenet of capitalism is exploitation. • Discussion: How might employers exploit their employees?

  9. Exploitation • Employees/owners make money (or profit) by paying employee/workers less than the value of their production. • For example, an employee makes 100 mechanical pencils an hour that are worth $1 a piece on the market, but rather than pay the employee $100/hour, the employer pays the employee $6.75/hour for a profit of $93.25 (minus fixed costs, such as raw materials, and taxes).

  10. The Jungle (1909)

  11. Exploitation continued . . . • Profit: driving force of capitalism; private investment and control of profit; money left over after fixed costs and labor costs; many make product (and earn wage); only one makes profit (net proceeds) • Profit loss: Market saturation, lower demand for product, raise in fixed costs, raise in labor costs, a change in supply and demand can all “eat into” the profit.

  12. To further increase profits • Employers exploit their employees by • Speeding up work • Lowering wages • Creating dangerous working conditions • Not allowing labor a voice (unions) • Laying off/downsizing workforce • Providing shorter breaks • Driving workers with hard labor

  13. Exploitation leads to Alienation • Alienation: a withdrawing or separation of a person or a person's affections from an object or position of former attachment

  14. Employees feel alienated . . . • From product: soul not in it; not sure what product is; no sense of “ownership” or pride in work • From self: drug addiction; insanity; lower self-esteem; loss of identity; just a number • From others: other employees; employers; family • From time: 9-5; watch the clock; no rest or relax; clock in and out

  15. Marxist critics may also analyze . . . • Marginalization of lower classes (placed at edge of society socially, economically, and politically) • Violence between the classes • Dehumanization of the lower classes • How all the above is tied to race, racism, sexism, etc. • How these ideas influence politics, religion

  16. How to . . . • Look for evidence of how the values of capitalism influence the characters and society are represented in a text. • Analyze the conflict between labor and capital. • Analyze representations of wealth/poverty. • Focus on working conditions of workers as represented in a text. • Analyze exploitation of worker as represented in a text. • Note instances of alienation in a film. • Note the marginalization of lower classes.

  17. Key Terms • Capitalism: the economic ideological base which values private ownership and profit for individuals • Labor: employees, workers • Capital: employers, owners, major investors • Base: beliefs, attitudes, and values of a society • Superstructure: laws, politics, education . . . which reflect the base • Exploitation: the difference between the value of production and what a worker is paid by the owner • Alienation: the results of capitalism on the worker; the separation between the worker and others due to exploitation on the job. • Marginalization: placing lower classes and people of color on edges of society socially, economically, and politically

  18. Resources Fish, Tom. Marxist Criticism. The Literary Criticism Web. Cumberland College. 23 June 1999. 15 Apr. 2004 <http://cc.cumberland college.edu/acad/english/ litcritweb/theory/marxism.htm>. Giannetti, Louis. Understanding the Movies. 11th ed. New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2008. Henderson, Greig and Christopher Brown. “Marxist Criticism.” Glossary of Literary Theory. U of Toronto. 31 Mar. 1997. 15 Apr. 2004. <http:// www.library.utoronto.ca/utel/glossary/Marxist_criticism.html>. Lynn, Steven. Texts and Contexts. New York: HaperCollins, 1994. Prince, Stephen. Movies and Meaning. 2nd ed. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 2001.

More Related