1st Edition

Marxism, Class Analysis and Socialist Pluralism A Theoretical and Political Critique of Marxist Conceptions of Politics

By Les Johnston Copyright 1986
    168 Pages
    by Routledge

    168 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book, first published in 1986, presents a radical challenge to socialist orthodoxy, subjecting a key component of that orthodoxy – Marxism – to sustained criticism. Les Johnston argues that Marxism cannot provide the foundations for a rigorous socialist theory or an effective socialist politics. A fundamental element of this criticism is the suggestion that the problem of ‘reductionism’ which has preoccupied Marxists is a red herring. Marxism’s problem is not its reductionism but its theoretical incoherence. Marxism is not ‘deterministic’, for there is invariably an indeterminate relationship between the materialism it invokes and the forms of politics it adopts. However, materialism is an obstacle to socialist theory. The contradictions and failures of Marxist class analysis suggest that the class concept is inadequate to the demands that socialists continue to place on it. It is not merely class which is problematic, however, but the conception of political interests which is associated with it. Even recent Marxist ‘revisionists’ who dispense with class primacy are unwilling to come to terms with the question of how socialist political interests are constituted. Socialist theory has to recognise the varied forces and interests on ‘the left’, and an effective socialism will have to be a pluralistic one. This means there can be no general theory of socialism, since a pluralistic socialism has to be able to adjust to varying social conditions.

    1. Introduction: Marxism and the Materialist Conception of Politics  Part 1. Marxism, Managerialism and Capitalist Possession  2. Marxism and the Problem of Managers  3. Marxism, Managerialism and Corporate Capitalism  Part 2. Marxism, Politics and the State  4. Classical Marxism and the State  5. Contemporary Debates on the Capitalist State  Part 3. Class Analysis and Socialist Political Calculation  6. Marxism and the Problem of the Working Class  7. Class and Political Ideology: A Non-Reductionist Solution?  Part 4. Theoretical and Political Conclusions  8. Socialist Theory and Socialist Pluralism