Xxxx and Subjectivity Sample Clauses

Xxxx and Subjectivity. As a Young Hegelian, Xxxx conceived the problem of subjectivity as the problem of universal human emancipation. In his Early Writings, this emancipation is realised primarily through philosophy. However, Xxxx develops the notion that human emancipation comes about through revolution, and recognises that a revolution needs a “material basis”, even if seen as a “passive element”.15 The passivity of this material basis is reflected in Xxxx’x analogy, adapted from Xxxxxxxxx,16 of philosophy as the head of emancipation, and the proletariat as its heart.17 In the Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts, motivated by his study of the French Revolution and the writings of political economy, Xxxx moves towards identifying a material basis for the dynamic conception of human nature that he detects in modern society. The impulse of this development is an understanding of the subjectivity of labour and that of private property. The theory of estranged labour that he develops in the Manuscripts begins to lay the basis for a conception of the proletariat as a subject. I will argue that this shift in Xxxx’x conception of subjectivity demonstrates that he is on the threshold of a new project. Xxxx’x discussion of the problem of subjectivity will set the parameters within which my investigation of subjectivity is located. Thus I will mainly be concerned with the question of collective subjects and, for Marxism in particular, with the problem of the subjectivity of classes. Since Xxxx never formulated a definitive statement of his conception of class, it is necessary to infer this from his writings. It is also apposite to ask how classes are composed as subjects, how a class is capable of action, and what processes might inhibit its activity. These questions are linked to an understanding of the relationship between consciousness and collective action. It is further necessary to enquire whether a theory of the subjectivity of classes is compatible with notions of other collective subjects, such as society, or the State.
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