"Marxist on socialisation" Essays and Research Papers

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    Carrie-Anne Hall 05007672 Sociology Essay Compare and contrast the Marxist and functionalist interpretations of education in society. The role of education is to educate individuals within society and to prepare them for working life in the economy‚ also to integrate individuals and teach them the norms‚ values and roles within society. There are many different sociological theories that differ within the role of education within society that attempt to try and explain how society or aspects

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    A Marxist reading is one which interprets history as a series of class struggles. Marxists believe that‚ within a society‚ people think and behave according to basic economic factors. These factors are derived from the dominant class imposing their beliefs on the lower classes in order to make them conform to the standards and beliefs of the dominant class. Bram Stoker’s novel‚ ’Dracula’ represents a class struggle not between the bourgeois society and the proletariat society where the proletariats

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    Post-Apocalyptic Hierarchies: A Marxist Criticism of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road The storm of post-apocalyptic novels has taken much of the literary world by storm in the past century or so. This does not stop just there‚ of course‚ it branches so far into other media that the storyline of a human life following the collapse of the world as we know it is not at all an unfamiliar one. Movies‚ video games‚ and the traditional books have all taken their own look at this interesting offshoot of (science)

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    and supposed visions as a part of theological insolence‚ Blake’s love for creativity and imagination updates his conception of a personal cosmology that supports both his lyric and visionary poetry. Blake’s poetry reflected early proclamations of Marxist topics even though Marxism had not even been documented as a theory. In order to present the theme of innocence throughout the poem‚ the rhyming pattern of this poem is maintained in quatrain form allowing it to create a mood of innocence with the

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    Examine some of the ways in which Marxists explain crime. One way in which Marxists examine crime is the idea that they feel crime is inevitable in capitalism because capitalism in itself is criminogenic. Due to capitalism being based on exploiting the working class by using them as a means of making profit‚ this is therefore damaging to the working class and arguably explains why crime is committed. Due to the exploitation of the working class‚ which may lead to poverty and in some cases the only

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    Zone One Marxist Analysis

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    Zone One and Marxism Colson Whitehead’s novel‚ Zone One‚ draws attention to the issue of consumer capitalism through a post-apocalyptic plot line. Leif Sorensen draws on at this point by discussing how Zone One feeds into his claim that “capitalism insists that the future will be an endless repetition of its cycles of creative destruction” (562). My essay builds and extend this claim by focusing on an overlooked aspect of the novel‚ the stragglers’ role of attempting to cling to the past. By concentrating

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    Marxist sociologists utilise Marxist concepts in order to provide a framework for understanding the cause and effects of crime and deviance in a capitalist society. These sociologists see power as being controlled by those who own and maintain the means of production. The superstructure of a capitalist society the agencies of social control‚ the law‚ politics as well as crime all reflect and serve ruling-class interests. According to Marxists‚ laws are patented in as a direct reflection of ruling-class

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    adopts principles of equality‚ freedom‚ and natural rights. Yet underneath its lofty ideals lies a socio-economic context that Marxist analysis reveals. Karl Marx’s historical commercialism provides a framework to critique the Declaration’s claims and purposes‚ which highlights its function as a tool to carry on bourgeois dominance. This essay dives deep into the Marxist critique of the Declaration of Independence‚ employing historical materialism to unravel its rudimentary functions and goals. By

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    and ‘gender’ Sex refers to the biological differences between men and women and gender refers to the expectations of society places on men and women. 4. Gender role socialisation - Gender role socialisation is the procedure in which society assigns boys and girls from primary socialisation (in the family) to secondary socialisation (in school and the mass media) into masculine and feminine modes of behaviour to create the idea that such modes are the norm for their sex. This was done heavily in

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    Socialisation is the ways in which people learn how to act in accordance with current social norms and values. Human behaviour is influenced by socialisation in as much as we are taught from a very early age that certain actions are acceptable in society and certain actions are not. For example young children are taught to use the potty instead of excreting faecal matter onto the floor. Socialisation is all around us‚ from our peers to our parents‚ but just how far is human behaviour actually influenced

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