Discuss the relevance of the concept of "class struggle" (Marx and Engel s) to the social and political divisions in the UK today.

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Discuss the relevance of the concept of "class struggle" (Marx and Engel s) to the social and political divisions in the UK today.

Marx was born in 1818 into a world in the throws of intense industrialisation in modern societies, massive factories implementing new manufacturing technologies dominated the skylines of cities which were expanding exponentially. Armies of workers were needed to fill these factories and mass produce goods to sell to the emerging new markets, floods of people flocked to the new urban centres leaving behind, for many, their traditional agricultural lifestyles in the countryside. Marx set out to explain what he saw around him, poverty for the masses and unbelievable wealth for a tiny minority. He asked himself enormous historical questions, why do things change? What are the patterns of change? Can change be controlled for better? And what, if at all, is the role of the individual in this change? Now in present contemporary societies industrialisation (for most advanced countries) is behind us, heavy industry has been replaced by service economies, the factories of the Victorian era by the office space of present day, the churning of cogs and gears by the churning of a hard drive, physical labour by mental labour. The aim of this essay is to explore Marx's ideas on class struggle and to see if it is relevant to the social political divisions in the United kingdom today.

'The history of all hitherto existing society is the history of class struggles.'

(Marx & Engels: communist manifesto:1)

Marx argues that at every stage of history there has been complicated societal arrangements which divide it's populous into various orders he explains in the communist manifesto: 'in ancient Rome we have patricians, knights, plebeians, slaves; in the middle ages feudal lords, vassals, guild-masters, journeymen, serfs; in almost all of these classes subordinate gradations' (Marx, 1848, p. 2). Marx goes on to say that modern society rose from the ashes of feudal society but class structures did not diminish, on the contrary, they polarised to into two strong economic classes, 'it has simplified the class antagonisms. Society as a whole is more and more splitting up into two great hostile camps, into two great classes directly facing each other: the bourgeosis and the proletariat' (Marx, 1848, p. 2). Here we can introduce Marx's idea of class, he understood these two classes not how we understand class today through occupational means, it was solely based upon peoples relationship with the means of production. In every stage of history human beings have at their disposal productive forces such as tools, animals, land, machinery etc that by which they can produce their basic means of survival: food, shelter and clothing. However he observed that historically one class has always monopolised these means of production and it is this key feature which separates people into different economic classes: the owners (bourgeosis) and the non-owners (proletariat).
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In Marx's time identifying these two great 'hostile camps' would have been relatively easy, the owners of the super factories and the workers who were forced to sell their labour in them, but can we still see this relationship in contemporary society? Afterall Marx predicted that these classes in a capitalist form of organisation should be becoming more and more split into the two 'the other classes decay and finally disappear in the face of modern industry; the proletariat is it's special and essential product' (Marx, 1848, p. 13). Critics have suggested that this boundary has become blurred ...

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