UGP Marxist Theories Lecture Presentation0
UGP Marxist Theories Lecture Presentation0
Historical/dialectical materialism
Human agency in human-made material
conditions
‘Men make their own history, but they do
not make it just as they please, they do not
make it under circumstances chosen by
themselves, but under circumstances
directly encountered, given and transmitted
from the past’ Marx, Brumaire
‘man’s consciousness not only reflects the
objective world but creates it’ Lenin,
Philosophical Notebooks
Marx’s Theory of Alienation
Marx’s Theory of Alienation
“whom am I now to believe, political economy or ethics? ...
It stems from the very nature of estrangement that each
sphere applies to me a different and opposite yardstick –
ethics one and political economy another; for each is a
specific estrangement of man and focuses attention on a
particular field of estranged essential activity, and each
stands in an estranged relation to the other.” Human Needs
& the Division of Labour, Marx 1844
‘The Empire…is
a bread-and
butter
question. If
you want to
avoid civil war,
you must
become
imperialists.’
John Hobson’s Imperialism, A
Study, 1902
Lenin’s work
drawing upon
Hobson’s
work
Large
extracts in
Lenin’s
Imperialism
Fate of Lenin’s Imperialism
‘imperialism’ became a generic term
with little content….the category
imperialism was extended to cover
almost any relationship of
subordination or control.
Today, Lenin’s ‘grounding of
imperialism in issues of the
boardroom has been almost entirely
forgotten’ (Lewis and Malone in
Lenin, 1996, p. xiii).
Common criticisms of Marxism
• utopian
• ignores conventional struggles for power
and security arising in anarchical system
(Ken Waltz)
• economic determinism (Martin Wight)
• over-estimation of class political struggle
• working class not revolutionary
• underestimated nationalism
• criticisms underscored by Marxist concepts
becoming rigid
Responses to criticisms
Economic determinism?
Various Marxist strands downplay dialectics and
suggest causal determinism
But dialectical method - understanding relations as
in motion, involving contradictory relations and
forces not simple static, causal determinism
Equating theoretical approach with results of
approach at particular historical moment
‘Most criticisms merely state the obvious – that the
world is not the same as when [they] wrote’ (Lewis
and Malone in Lenin, 1996, p. xiii).
Marxism’s influence on
International Relations theories
Influence on International Political Economy and
development theories
Modernisation theory as response to Marxism
• Rostow’s Stages of Economic Growth: A Non-Communist
Manifesto, 1960
Dependency or Underdevelopment theories
• Andre Gunder Frank, Samir Amin, Raul Prebisch
Gramsci and Neo-Gramcian theories
World-systems theories
• Immanual Wallerstein
Post-colonial theories e.g. Edward Said’s
Orientalism, Culture and Imperialism, Hardt
and Negri’s Empire
Continuing influence on critical theories e.g.
concepts of agency, emancipation etc
Dependency or underdevelopment
theories
Key theorists: Andre Gunder Frank, Samir
Amin, Raul Prebisch
Formal political control (colonialism) not
necessary to create dependency, possible
through economic means
Uneven development and underdevelopment
Capitalism leading to uneven development and
hindering development of developing countries
Not opposed to industrialisation
But entanglement of industrial sectors with
foreign capital relations
Seek strategies to develop independent national
economies free from international capitalist
political economy.
Relevance of Marxist theories
today?
Relevance of Marxist theories of class struggle,
capitalism, imperialism, militarism to
international politics today?
How do we understand humanitarian
intervention? e.g. Bosnia, Kosovo
How do we understand global governance? e.g.
Bosnia, Kosovo – economic drain rather than
economic extraction
Why invade Iraq if could better dominate a
country and extract more profit with formally
independent state without costs of occupation?
Responses
Dialectic understanding of social relations v
Marx’s particular analysis of social relations
under capitalism in particular period
Dialectic analysis of social relations in
motion will not be same as Marx’s analysis
of 150 years ago
E.g. Marx’s analysis of idealism in German
Ideology perhaps more relevant than Capital
in explaining today’s international
humanitarian interventions.
Further reading and resources
• E.g. communist manifesto in cartoon version that
I told you about:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=znMkqEnO6d4