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{{Short description|Model of society in Marxist theory}}
[[File:Base-superstructure Dialectic.
{{Sociology}}
{{marxism}}
In [[Marxism|Marxist theory]], [[society|societies]]
Königsberg, written on September 21, 1890. ''Historical Materialism'' (Marx, Engels, Lenin), p. 294 - 296. Published by Progress Publishers, 1972; first published by [[Der sozialistische Akademiker]], Berlin, October 1, 1895. Translated from German. Online version: marxists.org 1999. Transcription/Markup: Brian Baggins. Retrieved December 16, 2017.</ref>
==Model and qualification==
In developing [[Alexis de Tocqueville]]'s observations,{{clarify|reason=What observations, precisely? Alexis de Tocqueville isn't even mentioned in the lead. This is the first mention. "Oh darn, maybe it was a bad idea to skip yesterday's lecture because now I don't know where this lecture is jumping off" is not a feeling I enjoy on Wikipedia.|date=December 2024}} Marx identified [[Civil society#Modern history|civil society]] as the economic base and [[political society]] as the political superstructure.<ref>{{cite journal|author-first=Pawel |author-last=Zaleski |title=Tocqueville on Civilian Society. A Romantic Vision of the Dichotomic Structure of Social Reality |journal=Archiv für Begriffsgeschichte |publisher=Felix Meiner Verlag |volume=50 |date=2008}}</ref> Marx postulated the essentials of the base–superstructure concept in his preface to ''[[A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy]]'' (1859):
{{blockquote|
Marx's "base determines superstructure" axiom, however, requires qualification:
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Marx's theory of base and superstructure can be found in the disciplines of [[political science]], [[sociology]], [[anthropology]], and [[psychology]] as utilized by Marxist scholars. Across these disciplines the base-superstructure relationship, and the contents of each, may take different forms.
Among Marxists, the very concept of 'base and superstructure' is contentious. The historian [[E. P. Thompson]]
However, other Marxists continue to insist on the paradigm's importance. For example, in Paul Thomas' words:
Hall traces the development of the schema from ''[[The German Ideology]]'' and Preface to the ''Critique of Political Economy'', in which - according to Hall - Marx and Engels show relations of production form "the base" from which "legal and political superstructures" arise, to its application in both ''[[Das Kapital]]'' and ''[[The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis Bonaparte]]''.<ref name="ReferenceA"/> The latter work, Hall argues, offered a more sophisticated picture of the interaction between base and superstructure and showed Marx was concerned with the "''necessary complexity'' of the social formations of advancing capitalism and of the relations between its different levels".<ref name="ReferenceA"/>
===Max Weber===
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=== Walter Rodney ===
[[Walter Rodney]], the Guyanese political activist and African historian, in the 1970s discussed the role of [[Karl Marx|Marx's]] superstructure in the context of development cycles and colonialism. Rodney states that while most countries follow a developmental structure that evolves from feudalism to capitalism, China is an exception to this rule and skipped the capitalism step:<ref>{{cite journal|author-last=Campbell |author-first=Trevor A. |date=1981 |title=The Making of an Organic Intellectual: Walter Rodney (1942-1980) |journal=Latin American Perspectives |volume=8 |issue=1 |pages=49–63 |doi=10.1177/0094582X8100800105 |jstor=2633130 |s2cid=145790333}}</ref> <blockquote>The explanation is very complex, but in general terms the main differences between feudal Europe and feudal China lay in the superstructure – i.e. in the body of beliefs, motivations and sociopolitical institutions which derived from the material base but in turn affected it. In China, religious, educational and bureaucratic qualifications were of utmost importance, and government was in the hands of state officials rather than being run by the landlords on their own feudal estates.<ref name="auto">{{cite book|title=How Europe underdeveloped Africa |author-last=Walter |author-first=Rodney |others=Strickland, William, 1937-, Hill, Robert A., 1943-, Harding, Vincent,, Babu, Abdul Rahman Mohamed |year=2011 |isbn=9781574780482 |edition=Revised paperback |___location=Baltimore, Maryland |oclc=773301411}}</ref> </blockquote>By extension this means that the Marxist development cycle is malleable due to cultural superstructures, and is not an inevitable path. Rather the role of the superstructure allows for adaptation of the development cycle, especially in a colonial context.<ref
Rodney died in 1980, however, and did not have time to witness the effects of the [[Chinese economic reform]] of the 1980s ("socialist market economy") that arguably had made China the greatest capitalist country of the world by 2016.{{Citation needed|date=July 2025}}
===Freudo-Marxism and sex-economy===
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===Gilles Deleuze===
[[Gilles Deleuze]] takes a skeptical stance toward Marx's categorization of ideology as a part of the superstructure. Deleuze argues that this categorization minimizes the role that [[Philosophy of desire#Deleuze and Guattari|desire]] plays in forming such systems. He prefers to view ideology as an illusion altogether. In Deleuze's own words:
{{Blockquote
|text=One puts the infrastructure on one
}}
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Robinson argues that Engels' original argument that superstructures are 'relatively autonomous' of their base is correct but that the detail of the argument (which is based mainly on assertion) is unconvincing. Phrases such as 'in the last instance' or 'reflection' are equally undefined.
Developing the argument that superstructures exist to deal with contradictions in the base already put forward by [[Antonio Gramsci]], [[Terry Eagleton]] and others,
At the same time, the fact that superstructures must solve problems that their own base evidently cannot solve for itself means that they must produce effects and results the base cannot. For example, an industrial base requires masses of educated workers, but capitalism has never developed a way to create a mass of workers profitably. So it is necessary to create a public education system, outside the base, to do this.
===Can the base be separated from the superstructure?===
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===The legality question===
A
Robinson argues that legality does not make exploitation
===Neoliberalism and the state===
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