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Antonio Gramsci Blog Post

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

      Gramsci attempts to demonstrate the issues of social groups and intellectuals. He discusses the concept that everyone is an intellectual in their own specific way. Everyone specializes differently but not everyone is considered an “organiser of the ‘confidence’ of investors…”. Antonio then discusses the issues that socialists must accomplish with intellectuals. He makes this idea that is somewhat challenging to understand, because he describes the concept of “elite” organizing intellectuals into the groups in which they are good at. The things that people are good at is a result of the social group into which they were born in. He attempts to distinguish between intellectuals and non intellectuals. However he makes it very clear that although he tries to differentiate between the groups, there is no such thing as a non-intellectual group. Everyone is an intellectual as I stated before, but the amount of “celebral elaboration and muscular-nervous system effort is not always the same”.

        As of what I understand everyone has the intellectual capability to become a philosopher. It is up to society to help nourish the intellectuals. Gramsci uses marxism in this ideology of intellectuals. To help produce intellectuals he states that “different types of school( classical and professional) over the economic territory….give form to the production of various branches of intellectual specialisation”. This just states that the different social groups and “fabric” of society vary with the amount of  “organic quality” of intellectuals. I took this as the idea of industrialization aiding the specialisation of different intellectuals. A term that I saw that was repeated often was “hegemony”. He uses this term to specifically point out socialism and marxism. He uses hegemony to demonstrate that the ruling class used this to help keep their position in power. They persuade the lower classes to listen to their ideas, morals, and economic strategies.  It influences the lower class, but this is the reason why he stresses the need of intellectuals. He wants to control this hegemony by using intellectuals to dominate the higher class that is in power. 

      He specifically identifies an organic intellectual. From my understanding an organic intellectual is one that does not aim to assist the bourgeoise. Instead they help spread their ideas around in their group. Gramsci made a specific differentiation with organic and tradtional. On page 1003 Gramsci uses the Pope and the Church to show a traditional intellectual. He mocks the church because the identify themselves as ‘independent’. However they are closely tied with the higher class and aiding them. 

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The Distinct Binaries in “The Execution of Billy Bud”

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

Barbara Johnson’s deconstruction of “Melville’s Fist: The Execution of Billy Budd” expounds upon the disparity between critics on the true meaning of the story. She starts out with a clear cut description of each of the characters where Billy Bud is described as being unaware, innocuous, and attractive while John Claggart is displayed in a much different way as cunning yet refined. Captain Vere is shown as honorable and studious. Johnson makes us go against the grain as readers and makes us look at Billy and Claggart as readers. Billy in turn is a naive reader while Claggart is an ironic reader. In simpler terms Billy can be considered as a literal reader. It is more than a matter of good vs. evil here but a story of many binaries like “knowing and doing,” “speaking and killing” and “reading and judging.” According to Johnson language can only perform on flaws because the relationship between the signifier and signified does not “hit.” In other words, if a description could accurately describe something then it would destroy that object or thing at hand; like Billy destroys Claggart. Johnson takes apart Melville’s phrase of the “deadly space between” as foreshadowing or suggesting Claggarts death. The fault, according to Johnson with reading it just as good vs. evil is that the reversed reading is just as legitimate. The fate of each character is exactly the opposite of what they were described as in the beginning. Although Billy is described as an innocent character that seems naïve and unknowing he ends up being the one who strikes Claggart. All the while, Claggart is displayed as an evil character that actually ends up being the victim. This is where Captain Vere steps in to make a level headed judgment. Although, Vere knows that Billy is not wrong he still sentences him to death. The story is clearly filled with irony; that such a principled man would go against his true beliefs. Further because of this judgment we are compelled to interpret this story in our own view and the conclusion comes to be that Captain Vere’s character is quite ambiguous. He, in my opinion, is good and evil and yet he administers justice while being morally wrong. Johnson makes us as readers doubt the obvious characteristics of characters where Billy is innocent and Claggart is evil and this seems to be her goal in this deconstruction of “The Execution of Billy Bud.”

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Through the eyes of Marx: Political Economy

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

Political Economy fails in many aspects through the eyes of Karl Marx. In the “Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844” Marx makes a claim for the failure of political economy as he calls it, to promote the growth and progress of the very people that sustain this economic system; workers. In his explanation of the accepted values of this system, Marx states that workers are marginalized and alienated at various levels. One particular idea that provokes many thoughts in Marx’s essay is the relationship between labor (worker) and production and how he is alienated from it. In Marx’s words he believes workers are directly influenced to the amount of production they can make. He says “the more the worker produces, the less he has to consume, the more value he creates, the more valueless, the more unworthy he becomes…”. This of course creates the notion that in reality, workers only have value for the employer, or that they just no longer belong to or form a part of the system. Marx calls this phenomenon”estrangement” and in my opinion it is one of the most powerful points in Marx’s argument. In other words workers are set aside or made to seem worthless in a system that is allegedly predicated on giving everyone an equal opportunity to progress and gain capital.

Another aspect of this alienation is the loss of identity that workers experience as a result of this liberal capitalist system. According the Marx when living in a political economic system workers see themselves as workers first, before they even see themselves are physical beings. He believes that workers get so consumed with the idea of competing and being better than others that they invest their physical and mental health to achieve a goal that has been forced upon him as labor becomes “not voluntary but, coerced”. In my opinion as a person living in a capitalist society, I believe that many things can be changed or improved. One of these things is the distribution of wealth, I believe that redistributing the wealth among the people in a more or less balanced manner could better society because most of the wealth is in the hands of the famous “1%”. Extreme poverty is not so abundant as it was during Marx’s days, however closing the gap between the 1% and the rest of the people could certainly help the economy and society better as a whole.

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Antonio Gramsci, from ‘Prison Notebook:’ “The Formation of the Intellectuals”

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

Antonio Gramsci begins questioning whether intellectuals can be a social class or does not have its own special category of intellectuals. According to Gramsci, everyone is an intellectual. There are two types of intellectuals, Traditional Intellectuals and Organic Intellectuals. The traditional Intellectuals autonomous independence while organic intellectuals are bound to class, and more practical.
The difference between the intellectuals and non-intellectuals, means to refer in reality only to the immediate social function of the professional category of the intellectuals, with the intention of  what direction the mind is set on based on a specific professional activity, whether towards intellectual elaboration or towards muscular-nervous effort. Meaning, as Gramsci puts it “although one can speak of intellectuals, one cannot speak of non-intellectuals, because non-intellectuals do not exist.” Gramsci states that “all men are intellectuals, one could therefore say: but not all men have in society the function of intellectuals” meaning some may imitate the social function of the professional category of the intellectuals while others are primarily focus on the ‘muscular nervous effort.’ Nevertheless Gramsci also states that “there is no human activity from which every form of intellectual participation can be excluded: homo faber cannot be separated from homo sapiens”, whatever the profession may be Gramsci states that each person “carries on some form of [scholar] activity” such as a ‘philosopher’ who is consider to be “an artist, a man of taste, that contributes his moral conduct’ from the start to change the world. To be able to create a new stratum of intellectuals, it will take the effort to find the intellectual activity that is within everyone at a certain stage. The muscular-nervous effort by itself becomes the groundwork of a new idea for the world. Gramsci’s newspaper “Ordine Nuovo” states that he believes that worked is to develop a “new intellectualism and to develop its new concepts, which confirmed to the development of the real forms of life.” Gramsci states that there is “historically formed specialized category for the exercise of the intellectual function which is formed in connection with all of the social groups, especially the dominant social class. Classes that develop this dominancy struggles to understand the ‘ideologically’ of traditional intellectuals were quickly developed into organic intellectuals. In addition relating to Raymond Williams “Hegemony” from Marxism and Literature discusses the power of the ruling class to create consent for its position through the use of social and cultural forces.

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Marx and obscurity + study questions up

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

I’ve just posted study questions for the entire unit with corrected page #s, FYI.  And I wanted to share with you an image of a “camera obscura” to make Marx’s metaphor a bit less, well, obscure:

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[description from the Cabinet of Wonders blog]: The camera obscura works under the same principles as the pinhole camera: you make a small hole in the side of a box (either a real box or a room-sized box) and the light outside will get in through the hole and project itself onto a piece of paper or a wall, showing you a perfect image of the scene on the outside of the box. Because light travels in a straight line, and because the hole is small, the light on one side of the scene will have to come through at an opposing angle from the light on the other side of the scene.

As we discussed, the metaphor points at the way cultural representations preserve a kind of fidelity to social reality (i.e., the representation issues from the real thing) but in a distorted manner.  So the work of “ideological criticism” is to re-establish the relationship between reality and representation, a job that’s much more complex in most cases than the simple two-dimensional “flip” in a camera obscura would suggest.

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Blog Post 4: Marx/Engles ‘From Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844’

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

“The better formed his product, the more deformed becomes the worker.”

1). Just from the title and the opening paragraph, I’m willing to suspect that intersectionality between philosophy and economics can be found in political realities. How this pans out for Marx and Engles I’m not sure yet, but hopefully I can get a better grounding of Marx’s work, before I start making contemporary references (which I’ll try to refrain from, or at least save until the end).

2). Political Economy – an institution with it’s own set of laws and language. Characteristics of this economy include: private property, the separation of labor, capital and land, wages, profit of capital, rent of land, division of labor, competition, exchange-value. This type of economy commodifies not only the work that people do, but workers themselves, and there value is based on their scope of production – or rather, their lack of value is inverse to their scope or production. Large economic gaps are therefore created between the haves (owners) and the have-nots (workers).

2). “Political economy proceeds from the fact of private property.” So, in keeping with the title of this essay, and my earlier thesis, when capitalistic economic systems are in play, capitalistic philosophies and values govern our society (“the interest of the capitalists to be the ultimate cause”), and this is reflected by the laws passed by the government. Competition is posited to be an external characteristic of this system, instead of something produced within the system itself.

3). Alienation of Labor:

The money system gives rise to the characteristics of the political economy. Workers lose value as they produce more.
—> This can be scene with the rise of outsourcing. For example, interesting fact: iPads would be about 3 times the price (at 1,140) if they were produced in America and it’s workers were paid for their labor. Similarly, what allows companies such as Walmart and H&M to price their goods so low is that they are only paying for the materials, not for the cost of the labor.
—>This objectification of labor can be recognized in a process called “estrangement” or “alienation.”
—>Workers are kept in conditions of abject poverty and given only enough to sustain their work, nothing more. Very true, if one examines factory and sweatshop conditions that American companies impose globally in India, China, Bangladesh, and numerous Latin American countries. This also manifests itself inside of America, especially among those who work in the service industry.

4). “So much does the appropriation of the object appear as estrangement that the more objects the worker produces the fewer can he possess and the more he falls under the dominion of his product, capital.” This idea that the more a man/woman puts into their production of goods/God, the less they have in themselves. Their work becomes external to themselves, and by extension, their “life no longer belongs to [themselves] but to the object.” The parallel of religion to capitalism is an apt one, and one I think would be fruitful to explore in a later post. At the end of this essay, Marx and Engles write “Just as in religion the spontaneous activity of the human imagination, of the human brain and the heart, operates independently of the individual – that is, operates on him as an alien, divine or diabolical activity – in the same way the worker’s activity is not his spontaneous activity. It belongs to another; it is the loss of his self.” The ultimate goals, or if not goals then consequences, of forces such as religion and money are to fragment the worker, reduce, distort, and destroy one’s humanity, and make them controllable.

Within this exists a Marxist dichotomy of Freedom/Spontaneity vs. Object bondage/Alienation

Additionally, Christianity acts as a representation of people in society – there is a camera obscura affect, and ideology is topsy turvy to the reality in a way that rationalizes injustice in the world. Religion does reflect real material conditions and indexes things the way they are, but distorts them.

5). Workers use the materials provided by nature to allow their labor to manifest itself. The resultant is that nature provides 2 type of materials: means for a worker to produce labor, and means for a worker to live (food, shelter, etc.). Therefore, the more invested a worker becomes in one usage of nature, the less important the other becomes. Just as the more a person invests in their identity as a worker, the less they are valued as a physical subject. It is only through their work that they are able to sustain their human needs.

Additionally, many of these natural are considered to be zero-sum resources: clean water, housing, food – so if one person gets it, it means another is being deprived of it. However, for the worker, it means that the more natural resources that they appropriate for labor, the less they are able to utilize for their survival, and the worker becomes a double slave of his object (the object of labour).

6). So in the next paragraph, Marx and Engles talk about the ramifications of labour for the pour, versus the ramifications of labour for the rich. The rich get things, while the poor get privation, hardship, and destitution. My question is the role that education plays in this political economy. When universities are more concerned with their brands then their students, does this reflect a commodification of education? When even something like education, which was once used as an infrastructure to raise people out of poverty, is now serving to reinforce divides between social stratospheres, how can does this illustrate communist doctrine, and explode what’s increasingly becoming a myth of meritocracy? I still don’t think I understand Marxist doctrine enough to argue it, but I think it would be fascinating to research. This is a great article about internships and this sort of “prestige economy” that unpaid internships have created, and I think it really helps makes some of the more abstract principles in this text concrete. How would Marx react to such an article? http://www.policymic.com/articles/48829/why-you-should-never-have-taken-that-prestigious-internship

It ties into the expendability of workers, and the idea of surplus labor – I think Marx would argue that free labor is an ineluctable (am I using that right?) consequence within a political economy. Prestige economies are a microcosm which reflect this. It might even be tenable that prestige economies are metonymic of the other systems produced by the money system.

7). Forced Labour – “[Work] is not the satisfaction of a need; it is merely a means to satisfy needs external to it.”

8). This quote, which is the last sentence of the essay, relates to point number 4: “As a result, therefore, man (the worker) no longer feels himself to be freely active in any but his animal functions – eating, drinking, procreating, or at most in his dwelling and in dressing-up, etc.; and in his human functions he no longer feels himself to be anything but an animal. What is animal becomes human and why is human becomes animal.”

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blog feedback

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

I’m slowly making my way through all of your posts thus far and giving some feedback via email.  I’m about halfway through, so over the next few days, I should be getting to you if I haven’t.  As was the case last time, I’ve given a provisional grade to let you know where you stand.  If you think my tally of your posts is in error or you otherwise don’t understand my feedback, please get in touch.

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Blog 3: Jakobson and the Poetic Function

Posted by Jeff Allred (he/him/his) on

In Jakobson’s paper “Linguistics and Poetics”, he first elaborates on two terms that are central to his argument as they are broad classification systems that are thought to be in opposition. He states that “poetics deals with the problems of verbal structure” and linguistics is defined as the “science of verbal structure” (1145). Although some would separate poetics from the linguistic field, he argues that linguistics and poetics are intimately related. He remarks that “many poetic features belong not only to the science of language but to the whole theory of signs, that is, to general semiotics” (1145). For that statement to be valid, poetics and linguistics must be interconnected because the foundation of the study of language has been built on the theory of signs and semiotics. He also discards another objection in regards to the nature of poetry being “noncasual” as opposed to other verbal communication’s “casual” nature (1145). To debunk this belief he states, “any verbal behavior is goal-directed, but the aims are different…” (1146). As aforementioned, language itself is highly structured and this is validated by the fact that the study of language has spawned a wide variety of theories and fields such as semiotics.

Jakobson’s argument rests on theories grounded in and in contradiction to works by his predecessors and contemporaries. Jakobson concludes that “every language encompasses several concurrent patterns, each characterized by different functions” but that specific “speech events” are comprised of primary factors as well as “secondary factors” (1147). He expounds the six factors of a speech event which consist of an addresser (the person giving the message), context (the person, place or thing being referred to), message (the sound or utterance being made), contact (the medium used to convey the message to the addressee), code (the language or rules used in the code) and the addressee (the “decoder of the message”) (1147). After delineating the structure of a verbal message he outlines the function of various verbal messages. These functions include the emotive (focused on the addresser), the conative (focused on the addressee), the referential (focused on the context), the phatic (focused on the context) and the metalingual (focused on the code) and poetic functions (focused on the “message for its own sake”) (1148-1151).

Jakobson finds the use of the poetic function within and outside of poetry. Just as the interjection or the imperative are the purer forms of the emotive and conative functions respectively, “verbal art” is one of the purest embodiments of the poetic function (1150). However, verbal art isn’t the exclusive use of this function. This is one of the reasons that Jakobson argues against restricting the poetic function to the analysis of poetry. He states that even within poetry “the particularities of diverse poetic genres imply a differently ranked participation of the other verbal functions along with the dominant verbal function” (1151). A message’s structure is governed by a primary function and its subordinate functions (1148). Jakobson gives examples of the use of the poetic function in our daily lives through the use of poetic devices such as paronomasia and alliteration.

Jakobson opens “Linguistics and Poetics” with the question, “what makes a verbal message a work of art” (1144)? Hitherto, I was taught that what constitutes as “art” is completely subjective. Whether it be a painting by a well renowned artist like Van Gogh or an exhibit including everyday objects, self-expression seems to be whatever you deign to call it. Art comes in such a broad spectrum of forms that this very characteristic of diversity is why one might be inclined to assume that it has no real structure. However, this is a deceptive notion because when this generalization is applied to different forms of art such as poetry it falls short. Jakobson’s analysis of verbal utterances and poetics is so illuminating because poetry, arguably the most structured form of language (in the eyes of many), can be found in practically all walks of human life – from works designated to the field of poetry to marketing slogans and everyday speech. The poetic function is utilized constantly. In fact, it was probably used in writing this blog post.

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