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THE BEGINNING OF MARXIST LITERARY CRITICISM

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Title: THE BEGINNING OF MARXIST LITERARY CRITICISM


1
THE BEGINNING OF MARXIST LITERARY CRITICISM
  • Literary Criticism
  • Sandya Maulana, S.S.

2
THE BEGINNING OF MARXIST LITERARY CRITICISM
  • Although Karl Marx had been writers of poems and
    fiction, his works referred very little to the
    discussion and criticism of literature.
    Nevertheless, his philosophy has a very broad
    influence on critics and writers, giving birth to
    what would be called Marxist literary criticism.
    In this class, we will not discuss Marxs
    significance as a forefather of communism and
    class struggle, but rather we will discuss his
    importance in forming a literary movement that
    considers literature a sociological phenomenon to
    be treated similarly to other such phenomena. Due
    to the limited scope of this class, we will only
    discuss Marxs (and Engels) influence on the
    sociological and historical study of literature.
  • Marxs and Engels comments on art and literature
    are scattered and fragmentary. This is one reason
    why Marxist criticism involves more than merely
    re-stating cases set out by the founders of
    Marxism. Part of it constructs the science known
    as the sociology of literature, which concerns
    mainly the means of literary production how
    books are published, the social composition of
    their authors and audiences, levels of literacy,
    the social determinants of taste, and the
    sociological relevance of literary texts. More
    than sociology of literature, Marxist criticism
    develops a sensitive attention to the forms,
    styles, and meanings of literary works as the
    products of a particular history. The originality
    of Marxist criticism, then, lies not in its
    historical approach to literature, but in its
    revolutionary understanding of history itself.

3
KARL MARX AND FREDERICK ENGELS
  • Marx designates the terms base or
    infrastructure to the forces and relations
    of production which form the economic structure
    of society. From this economic base, emerges a
    superstructure, certain forms of law and
    politics, a certain kind of state, whose
    essential function is to legitimate the power of
    the social class which owns the means of economic
    production. The superstructure also contains
    definite forms of social consciousness
    (political, religious, ethical, aesthetic, and
    others), which is what Marxism designates as
    ideology. The function of ideology, also, is to
    legitimate the power of the ruling class in
    society. The dominant ideas of a society are the
    ideas of its ruling class.
  •  
  • Art and literature for Marxism are part of the
    superstructure of society, the societys
    ideology. To understand literature, in Marxist
    literary criticism, is understand the total
    social process of which it is part. Literature
    may be part of the superstructure, but it is not
    merely the passive reflection of the economic
    base. Engels wants to deny that there is any
    mechanical, one-to-one correspondence between
    base and

4
  • superstructure elements of the superstructure
    constantly react back upon and influence the
    economic base. The materialist theory of history
    (which is part of Marxist understanding) denies
    that art can in itself change the course of
    history but it insists that art can be an active
    element in such change.
  • Marx believed that literature should reveal a
    unity of form and content. He was suspicious of
    excessively formalistic writing. According to
    Marx, form is the product of content, but reacts
    back upon it in a double-edged relationship. Marx
    remarked that form is of no value unless it is
    the form of its content, a statement that could
    equally be applied to his aesthetic views. Marxs
    commentary on form and content of literature
    would inspire a lengthy discussion on the
    significance of both form and content in a
    literary work. This began with George Lukacs and
    Leon Trotsky and would later continue to involve
    more recent Marxist critics, such as Lucien
    Goldmann, Pierre Macherey, and Fredric Jameson.
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