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Class Struggle
Historically, global patterns of structured socioeconomic inequality have varied in societies. Class struggle is a central tenet of Marxist analyses. Some scholars examine social stratification as it relates to the experience of African-descended people. They consider class struggle to be a central component in the fight against the social inequalities in modern societies such as those in the United States and the United Kingdom. In such societies, which use capitalism and free market enterprise as a socioeconomic organizing principle, the population is stratified and the distribution of wealth in society is primarily skewed toward benefitting the group that controls and/or owns the means of production (the technology and resources used to produce the goods and services in the society). Black people in the African diaspora most often do not have control over the key resources that maintain the societies in which they live. These resources are fundamentally in the control of the white-led governmental, banking, business, and cultural sectors of these societies.
The key European thinker to have analyzed class struggle in relation to capitalist societies is Karl Marx (1818–1883). Along with his colleague, Friedrich Engels (1820–1895), Marx defined class struggle as fundamentally pertaining to the conflict between the ruling class (the bourgeoisie) and the working class (the proletariat), or the oppressor and the oppressed. In their classic work, The Communist Manifesto, Marx and Engels maintained that capitalism is an avaricious economic system. They mainly focused in that book on explaining the exploitation inherent in capitalist systems of socioeconomic organization. Moreover, they primarily examined the oppression of those in the white working class, who were seen as nothing more than an exploited commodity in the capitalist system.
A key point in the African-centered critique of Marxism is that Marx and Engels make no mention of the overt oppression and exploitation of those of African descent. Indeed, they say nothing about the millions of Africans in the diaspora who, at the time they were writing, were oppressed under European colonial and imperial dominance in the Caribbean region and on the continent of Africa. In their analysis of capitalism, then, Marx and Engels failed to deal with the oppression of the millions of unpaid laborers who were not only exploited through the use of their labor but also systematically brutalized and dehumanized via racialized oppression.
Some black scholars have used the class struggle paradigm of Marxism to explain the socioeconomic foundation of exploitation ingrained in capitalism. Yet the majority of black Marxists employ a racialized as well as economic analysis of exploitation in relation to class struggle. In How Capitalism Underdeveloped Black America (1983), Manning Marable suggests that capitalism is more of a problem than communism for black Americans. The Marxist panacea for race oppression is tied in with that for class oppression. For black Marxists, the root cause of racialized discrimination is the unequal distribution of wealth and power. Discrimination based on race is merely employed by the ruling class to fragment the working class and to set white workers against black workers. This tactic keeps at distance the possibility of unity or class consciousness among the exploited masses. Black Marxists believe that the issue of race is secondary to that of class, and that if the class struggle is won by the working classes, then race will no longer be relevant.
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