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Marxism, Interpretation, and Critical Realism Today’s Structure Dialectical Materialism: A brief intro Critical Realism: An introduction Some Key Epistemological Terms illustrated with sex/gender (Judith Butler will hunt me down and hurt me for this!) Dialectical Materialism Marx inverts Hegel’s idealistic notion that abstract ideas drive the world Borrows Hegel’s Dialectic – ideas are negated by other ideas and result in a higher proposition – Commonly expressed as ‘Thesis – Anti-thesis – Synthesis’ – Capitalism gets negated by the Proletariat as a class-for-itself and the product is the negation of negation, i.e. Communism! Dialectic Materialism: material conditions produce ideas, shape ideas, and dictate ideas Need to study material conditions in order to understand social structures! Base/Superstructure Critical Realism Seen as a rehabilitation of Marxism as a critical science (Roy Bhaskar) A critical social science would ‘go beyond’ actors’ meanings and demonstrate the influence of social structures that can be made the object of human agency to change them More recently associated with Andrew Sayer; and Margaret Archer who drops the recuperation of Marx. A critique of ‘positivism’ in natural sciences and its inadequate ontology Facts speak for themselves, we can objectively account for reality by observing it CR accepts that there are material objects which exist independently of our theories of them BUT they can never be ‘known’ and represented independently of our fallible theories of them! (see Roy Bhaskar) ‘Closed’ versus open ‘Systems’ Natural scientific experiments involve ‘closed systems’ They seek to control the variables In order to establish a causal relationship But the social world exists and functions in an open system Open systems are leaky, prone to adaptation, rejection, and resistance Social interventions have a history, local contexts, and exist within complex bureaucracies. Critical Realist Epistemology Empiricists/positivists are concerned with the mere association of events (and that is the case of statistics too) CR theorists want to identify the causal mechanisms behind events and their association Also critical of Interpretivists or relativists: Reality is socially constructed What we see is always shaped by theory Observations are relative to their culture and time Therefore there is no truth (Precluding Agency???) CR agrees that values matter BUT also interested in broader normative questions (how things should be) – not only how they are Particularly concerned with socially disadvantaged groups And how certain explanations are dominant and oppressive What’s Critical About Critical Realism? Realists sit between two positions (positivism and interpretivist) CR assumes the existence of a reality that is ‘intrasitive’ (the physical and social (embodied) world we inhabit) And a reality that is independent of our senses that is ‘transitive’ (ideologies, forms of social organisation) Intransitive and transitive reality both influence or are causal to our behaviour and both need to be studied Example: Sex and Gender See Caroline New (2005) in New Formations: Critical Realism Today Uses a CR approach to critique poststructuralist approaches to the sex/gender dyad, particularly Butler’s argument that ‘sex is always already gender’ Argues that accepting the materiality of the body does not mean one has to accept biological determinism Poststructuralist feminism in stuck in the discursive realm Need to return to a second wave feminist concern with concrete material oppression The “discursive turn” has undermined and weakened feminist activism This is the product of a deep mistrust of causal explanation, abstraction and generalisation Transitive and Intransitive Dimensions of Sex New argues that sexual difference is real It is prominent in all imaginable societies It is a causal factor for gendered orders (which may intersect with other structures) ‘human beings are (almost all) sexually dimorphic, female and male, whether and however they conceptualize this difference, and this dimorphic structure is active, causally powerful, enabling different reproductive roles and certain sexual possibilities and pleasures, and ruling out others’ The Stratification of Reality By using the example of intersex people Butler conflates the intransitive with the transitive The intransitive dimension is constituted by ‘levels’ and ‘emergent properties’ ‘The actual’ - concrete things and historical events ‘The empirical’ – what can be known and experienced ‘The real’ – includes both of the above • and also structures of objects (or interrelations between constituent parts) • And emergent properties which result from the structures (i.e. power, hierarchy, inequality, etc.) • And these properties have generative mechanisms (which are interdependent with other structures – i.e. gender and sexuality or her example of the military and masculinity) The Reality of Sex Sex/gender is either seen as a discursive practice or these is an untheorised acceptance of differentiated bodies assigned arbitrary lables We don’t assign social significance to our earlobes but we do to our genitals New argues sex cannot be though of like race! On the empirical level there are observable differences but on a deeper level there are no significant genetic markers Sex is not like that! We can imagine a world without race but it is difficult to imagine a world without sexual difference Sexual dimorphism as a causal condition of the gender roles we know Sex is socially significant (i.e. it has causal powers) We need to look at tendencies not laws Our reproductive organs result in different reproductive roles and sexual possibilities Little boys will never grow to have a womb in which to grow another human Little girls learn they can’t pee standing up She argues that she struggles to see how sociologists can argue that gender happens at a bodily site rather than referring to it Gender is a social effect of its referent (?) Base/superstructure Sexual difference as a causal mechanism acting in conjunction with other mechanisms (contexts) to produce varied gender orders E.g. technological advancement, religious prohibition, etc. ‘In sum, sex is ontologically prior to gender, and is one of the many mechanisms the workings of which shape gender orders. It does not determine gender, nor is gender reducible to sex’ Seminar Questions 1. What aspects of social life are considered as not socially constructed by critical realists? 2. How do critical realists propose we should study social reality? 3. What criticisms does John Holmwood level at Andrew Sayer and are they persuasive?