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IDEOLOGY

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'Logy' from the Greek 'logos,' reason (universal) or speech. ... Coined in 1796 by French philosopher Antoine Destutt de Tracy (1754-1836), 'in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IDEOLOGY


1
IDEOLOGY
2
Ideology Etymology
  • Idea from the Greek idein, to see. An
    archetype, a prototype.
  • Logy from the Greek logos, reason
    (universal) or speech.
  • Ideology (beginning definition) seeing reason,
    or, archetypal reason.

3
Ideology Origins
  • Coined in 1796 by French philosopher Antoine
    Destutt de Tracy (1754-1836), in response to
    the French Revolution.
  • Steeped in Enlightenment ideals that people
    could understand and control their world through
    systematic, scientific analysis and rational
    action (he was highly influenced by John Locke
    and British empiricism).

4
Ideology Origins
  • For de Tracys, ideology was a process
  • Goal study ideas and to help people analyze
    their own ideas.
  • Intent sort out ideas that were based on
    experience (sensory) and were therefore valid
    from those that had no basis in experience, and
    were consequently groundless.

5
From Ideologiste to Ideologue
  • What was originally hailed as a starting point
    for reform soon clashed with the purposes of
    Napoleon Bonaparte.
  • He dismissed the ideologistes as impractical
    visionaries and troublemakers (ideologues) who
    hold dangerous or false ideas.
  • This negative connotation was continued by Karl
    Marx, and pervaded until fairly recently when it
    has taken a more neutral meaning.

6
Marx on Ideology
  • Integral the divisions in labor (managers from
    workers, workers from product). This will be
    discussed later in the week.
  • There is an alienation that occurs (among people,
    in work) which is a breeding ground for
    ideology.

7
Marx on Ideology
  • The separation between brain-workers and
    hand-workers stimulates the sense of reality of
    those that own the means of production (the upper
    class).
  • Brain-workers, without physical objects to work
    upon, invent independent external realities that
    explain the state of affairs (class, justice,
    etc.).
  • For Marx, these realities are a distorted
    conception of state, law, morality, history,
    relation to nature, and the future prospects of
    humanity.

8
Marx on Ideology
  • For Marx, ideology is a falsehood that serves the
    aims of the upper class (those that own the means
    of production). It rationalizes the arrangements
    from which it derives its privileges.
    Institutions and conceptions that develop from
    these interests are mistakenly considered
    natural.
  • Example American Dream

9
Voices on Ideology
  • Sigmund Freud (Future of an Illusion, 1927)
    refers to cultural ideals
  • The narcissistic satisfaction provided by the
    cultural ideal is also among the forces which are
    successful in combating the hostility to culture
    within the cultural unit. The satisfaction can
    be shared in not only by the favoured classses,
    which enjoy the benefits of the culture, but also
    by the suppressed ones, since the right to
    despise the people outside it compensates them
    for the wrongs they suffer within their own unit.
    No doubt one is a wretched plebeian, harassed by
    debts and military service but to make up for
    it, one is a Roman citizen . . .
  • the suppressed classes can be emotionally
    attached to their masters in spite of their
    hostility to them they may see in them their
    ideals unless such relations of a fundamentally
    satisfying kind subsisted, it would be impossible
    to understand how a number of civilizations have
    survived so long in spite of the justifiable
    hostility of large human masses.

10
Voices on Ideology
  • Karl Mannheim (early 20th century sociologist)
    ideology is a collective, prevalent illusion that
    is historically and culturally relative. Result
    there are no truth standards in society.
  • Louis Althusser (mid/late 20th century
    philosopher) in Ideology and Ideological State
    Apparatuses
  • Ideas have disappeared as such (insofar as they
    are endowed with an ideal or spiritual
    existence), to the precise extent that it has
    emerged that their existence is inscribed in the
    actions of practices governed by rituals defined
    in the last instance by an ideological apparatus.
    It therefore appears that the subject acts
    insofar as he is acted by the following system.
  • That is, for Althusser we acquire our identities
    by seeing ourselves and our social roles mirrored
    in ideologies. Our desires and moral values are
    instilled in us through ideological practice.

11
Voices on Ideology
  • Iris Marion Young (contemporary feminist
    philosopher) in Justice and the Politics of
    Difference (1990)
  • Ideas function ideologically, as I understand
    that term, when they represent the institutional
    context in which they arise as natural or
    necessary. They thereby forestall criticism of
    relations of domination and oppression, and
    obscure possible emancipatory social
    arrangements.
  • Widespread commitment to the ideal of
    impartiality serves at least three ideological
    functions . . .
  • It supports the idea of the neutral state . . .
  • It legitimates bureaucratic authority and
    heirarchical decision making processes . . .
  • It reinforces oppression by hypostatizing the
    point of view of privileged groups into a
    universal position . . .
  • For Young, Ideology inculcates a state of affairs
    where the particular is lost in favor of
    impartiality (the universal), and this leads to
    oppression.

12
So, what is ideology?
  • A general understanding of ideology (a working
    definition)
  • Ideology refers to ideas, attitudes, and values
    that represent the interests of a group or class
    of people. These ideas are expressed in the
    media, through the arts, and in all of the ways a
    group within a society displays its perception of
    the world.

13
Now, bring all of this knowledge to bear on the
movie . . .
  • From Jesus to Christ, the First Christians
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