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Subjectivism

From ProleWiki, the proletarian encyclopedia
(Redirected from Subjectivity)

Subjectivism, in Marxist-Leninist analysis, denotes both the conscious, active dimension of human existence and the historically specific forms of interiority produced by particular modes of production, most critically, how capitalism generates alienated consciousness while simultaneously creating conditions for revolutionary subjectivity.

Materialist conception of subjectivity[edit | edit source]

Against idealist conceptions of the autonomous subject, historical materialism demonstrates that consciousness is socially produced. As Marx wrote, "it is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness."[1] Subjectivity emerges through labor, through transforming nature and participating in definite social relations. The bourgeois subject, imagining itself as atomized, self-sufficient, freely contracting, is itself a historical product of class relations.

Under capitalism, subjectivity is fundamentally divided along class lines. The proletariat develops collective consciousness through shared conditions of exploitation and common struggle. The bourgeoisie's subjectivity is shaped by its parasitic relationship to surplus value extraction. Revolutionary theory aids in transforming spontaneous class consciousness into organized, theoretically informed class consciousness, what Lukács termed consciousness of the totality.[2]

Ruling class ideology penetrates subjective experience, generating forms of false consciousness that obscure objective class interests. Workers may identify with their exploiters, naturalize their oppression, or displace antagonism onto other workers. Ideological struggle involves developing critical consciousness capable of penetrating these mystifications, recognizing that what appears as individual subjective experience (failure, aspiration, isolation) has objective social causes.

In relation with revolutionary practice[edit | edit source]

The revolutionary party serves as the conscious vanguard, dialectically relating to mass subjectivity, neither dismissing spontaneous consciousness nor tailing it, but developing theory from practice while raising consciousness through organized struggle. The formation of revolutionary subjectivity is not automatic but requires active intervention, education, and the lived experience of collective action against class enemies.

Socialist construction transforms subjectivity by altering material conditions, collective ownership develops collective consciousness; planned economy undermines competitive individualism; elimination of exploitation creates conditions for unalienated social relations. The "new socialist person" emerges not through moral exhortation but through transformation of the material base that produces subjectivity.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. “It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but their social existence that determines their consciousness.”

    Karl Marx (1859). "A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy" Marxists.org.
  2. “Only when the immediate interests are integrated into a total view and related to the final goal of the process do they become revolutionary, pointing concretely and consciously beyond the confines of capitalist society.”

    György Lukács (1920). [https://www.marxists.org/archive/lukacs/works/history/lukacs3.htm "Georg Lukacs History & Class Consciousness

    Class Consciousness"] Marxists.org.