Friday, 8 November 2019

The Social Class Series: Karl Marx


Social class is a central concept within the study of Sociology. It is one of the first forms of inequality one reads about when taking an introductory course in the subject. This series will look at different conceptualisations of social class given by the most popular social theorists writing on the subject. This first post explains and discusses the work of Karl Marx.

Karl Marx was interested in historical materialism: how the economic base of society shapes the classed living conditions of social groups throughout history. These historical societal structures are referred to as modes of production. For example, feudalism and the lived conditions of nobility and peasantry as well as the capitalist and the consumer within capitalism. Marx wrote about how an individual’s relation to the modes of production affects their living conditions. In particular, within the Communist Manifesto, Marx discusses two classes that are in direct opposition to each other: the bourgeoisie and the proletariat.
The bourgeoisie are the middle/upper class, those who own the means of production (e.g. factory owners). The proletariat are the working class, those who have to sell their labour to survive within society (e.g. the factory workers). Within these classes there are sub-classes. Within the bourgeoisie there is the haute (upper), moyenne (middle) and petite (petty) bourgeoisie. Within the proletariat Marx distinguishes between the proletariat as workers with a salary and the lumpenproletariat, those who can be described as residing within the underclass and the poorest within society e.g. vagabonds and sex workers.

As one can see, Marx’s conceptualisation of class is dependent upon one’s financial position as he emphasizes the economic base of society, that is resources and production which creates societal goods for exchange, as shaping one’s social class and their experience within the superstructure. The superstructure refers to societal institutions such as the family, politics, culture, religion and education. Due to the emphasis on the economic base, Marx does not credit other factors which could conceptualise one’s class. Similarly, it is difficult to ascertain how relatable the theory is to society now since the industrial revolution in which Marx was writing. Of course, it is possible to apply his account to our capitalist mode of production but what about other aspects of society. Would we still categorise sex workers as part of the underclass when so many students are engaging in this work to pay for their way through university?