|
|||||
![]() Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
Lesson
22
THEORIES
OF CLASS AND STRATIFICATION I
The
ideas developed by Karl Marx
and Max Weber forms the
basis of most sociological
analysis of class
and
stratification. Broadly theories have
been divided into conflict
and functionalist perspectives
and these
two
will be the focus of our
discussion.
Stratification
and Conflict
Social
conflict perspective argues that, rather
than benefiting society as a whole,
social stratification benefits
some
people at the expense of others. This
analysis draws heavily on the ideas of
Karl Marx, with
contributions
from Max Weber.
Karl
Marx: Class and
Conflict
Marx
(1818-1883) argued that the distinctions
people often make between
themselves such as
clothing,
speech,
education, or relative slavery are
superficial matters that camouflage the
only real significant
dividing
line: people either (the bourgeoisie) own the
means of production or they (the proletariat)
work for
those
who do. This is the only
distinction that counts, for
these two classes make up
modern society.
Means
of production refer to the sources by
which people gain their
livelihood.
Hence
people's relationship to means of
production determines their
social class.
Before
the rise of modern industry, the means of
production consisted primarily of land
and the
instruments
used to tend crops or
pastoral animals. In such
societies the two main
classes were those
who
owned
the land (aristocrats, gentry or slave-holders)
and those actively engaged in
producing from it
(serfs,
slaves
and free peasantry).
In
modern industrial societies, factories,
offices, machinery and the wealth or
capital needed to buy
them
have
become more important. The
two main classes are
those who own these
new means of production
the
industrialists or capitalists
called
as Bourgeoisie
(boorzhwahze)
and those who earn
their living by
selling
their labor to them the
property-less working class
called as proletariat.
According
to Marx in Das
Kapital three
great classes exist in modern
societies:
The
owners of mere labor power,
the owners of capital, and the landlords,
whose respective sources
of
income
are wages, profit, and
ground-rent.
The
relationship between classes is an
exploitative one. In feudal societies,
exploitation often took the
form
of
the direct transfer of produce from the
peasantry to the aristocracy. Serfs
were compelled to give a
certain
proportion of their production to
their aristocratic masters, or
had to work for certain
number of
days
in the lord's fields to produce crops
consumed by the lord.
In
modern industrial societies, the source
of exploitation is less obvious, and
Marx devoted much
attention
to
trying to clarify its
nature. In the course of the working
day workers produce much
more than is actually
needed
by employers to repay the cost of
hiring them. [Value of
product of labor value of
labor = the
surplus
value] This
surplus
value
is the source of profit, which
capitalists are able to put
to their own use.
The
labor becomes a commodity.
Wealth is produced on a scale far beyond
anything seen before,
but
workers
have little access to the wealth
their labor creates.
The
capitalist becomes richer while the
proletariat gets poorer.
Marx used the term pauperization
to
describe
the
process by which the working
class grows increasingly impoverished in
relation to the capitalist
class.
Even
if the workers become more
affluent in absolute terms, the
gap separating them from the
capitalist
class
continues to stretch ever
wider.
These
inequalities between the capitalist and
working class were not
strictly economic in nature. Work
itself
becomes
dull and oppressive in the modern
factories resulting in dehumanizing the
work environment.
56
![]() Introduction
to Sociology SOC101
VU
The
capitalist class draws its
strength from more than the
operation of the economy. Through the
family,
opportunity
and wealth are passed down
from generation to generation. Moreover,
the legal system
defends
this practice through the law of
inheritance. Similarly the exclusive schools
bring children of the
elite
together, encouraging informal social
ties that will benefit them
throughout their lives. In this
way
capitalist
society reproduces
the class structure in each new
generation.
Marx
saw great disparities in wealth
and power arising from this
productive system, which
made class
conflict
inevitable. Over time, Marx believed,
oppression and misery would
drive the working
majority
(labor
class) to organize, challenge the
system, and ultimately
overthrow the capitalist system.
Such a class
struggle
has been part of the history
of societies. According to Marx;
through this revolution the
capitalist
system
is replaced by socialist system resulting
in a classless society. In such a
society, humans will be
able
to
live in a world where they
are not prevented from realizing
their full potential by the
constraints of class
societies.
In a classless society the principle of
"from each according to his
ability, to each according to
his
need"
comes into operation.
Critical
evaluation:
How
do we motivate people to do their job
efficiently? Motivating people to perform
various social roles
requires
some system of unequal
rewards. Severing rewards
from performance generates
low productivity.
In
capitalist societies the wages of
workers have increased. Here
people talk of The
Affluent Worker.
Between
the two classes a third
class of petite
bourgeoisie
small owners, managers,
supervisors, and
autonomous
workers has emerged. Such a
situation is not going to let the
capitalist system to
collapse.
All
workers don't support the Labor Party, as
it is evident from the voting
behavior pattern of laborers in
UK.
Also
people talk about the collapse of
USSR.
Religion
used as the pain-killer for
oppression. (Religion as opiate of the people)
57
Table of Contents:
|
|||||