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Class Consciousness and the Marxist Dialectic: The Elusive Synthesis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2009
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Within the Marxist theory of history and society, the concept of class consciousness has played a major, though problematic, role. The proper interpretation of this concept, embedded as it is within the complex relational framework of the historical dialectic, has presented a perennial problem to the interpreters of Marx, both the theorists and the activists. For both logical and practical reasons, class consciousness can be seen as the Achilles' heel of the Marxist scheme.
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1 There are, certainly, other theorists, for example, Kautsky and Trotsky, who made important contributions to the debates within Social Democracy at the turn of the century. These three theorists have been selected because they illustrate clearly the dilemmas involved in, and alternatives available for, defining class consciousness within the Marxist tradition.
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