English literature: literary Marxism

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  • Marxism in Literature
    • Karl Marx
      • believed that Western capitalist economic systems were designed to suppress the poor and increase the wealth of the rich
      • critics tend to believe that authors' writing is a product of their class and cultural values
        • the texts themselves are a product of ideology
      • Marxist reader keeps in mind: power, work, oppression and money
      • Marxism questions whether the text supports the social / economic system of the time or whether it undermines it
    • politics of class
      • nowadays Marxism has died down within political parties and systems
      • intellectual perspective
        • provides a counterbalance to the idea of seeing authors and works of literature as separate from politics
        • also counterbalances the idea that literature comes from free, uninfluenced thought
      • Towards a Critique of Political Economy
        • 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
      • Marxist theory
        • the way we think and experience the world is conditioned by the way the economy is organised
        • the base of society determines its superstructure
          • base - the way the economy is organised
          • superstructure - culture: education, law, religion, philosophy, political programmes and the arts
        • capitalism thrives on exploiting workers
        • labourers get less than those higher up the scale
    • Marxist literary criticism
      • Marx and Engels didn't say anything about literature themselves
        • emphasise a difference between art and propaganda
      • a writer's social class has a major impact on what they write
        • constantly formed by social contexts
      • rarely discusses specific details of a historical event
        • has a generic view on all class disputes
    • what Marxist critics do
      • 1. make a division between the overt and covert
        • relate the covert to Marxist themes like class division
      • 2. relate the content of the work to the social class of the author
        • the author is unaware of what they are revealing in the text
      • 3. explain the nature of a whole literary genre in terms of which social period 'produced' it
        • the novel speaks for this social class
      • 4. relate the work to the social assumptions of the time in which it is consumed
        • used in cultural materialism
      • 5. 'politicisation of literary form'
        • literary forms are determined by political circumstance, ie structure represent societal structure
    • Twelfth Night example
      • every character has a secondary world
      • those in higher class don't suffer consequences while the lower class do
      • the servants have aspirations
      • read with social mobility
    • Marxist criticism
      • if it is to be read like this then evidence of economy is needed
      • not all Marxist readings will come to the same conclusion - it is varied
      • a concern with material living conditions
        • yet more theoretical in literature
      • influential critics
        • Louis Althusser
        • Pierre Macherey

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