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Marxist Theory
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Marxist theory is a framework for analyzing society, history, and economics through the lens of class struggle, material conditions, and the dynamics of power between those who own the means of production and those who labor for them. It appears across a wide range of disciplines, including sociology, political science, economics, history, and literary studies. Students are drawn to it because it offers a systematic critique of capitalism and a method for explaining inequality, conflict, and social change that cuts across multiple fields of inquiry.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a genuinely broad range of approaches. Some take a historical or economic angle, tracing the development of economic thought and situating Marxist ideas within broader intellectual traditions. Others apply conflict theory to institutional settings such as schools, examining empowerment and disempowerment in education. Still others extend Marxist analysis into cultural and literary territory, exploring geographic imagination in American literature, racial ideology, and shifting cultural values over time. Applied analyses also appear, with students using the framework to examine everyday objects, labor, deskilling, and the prison system.

A strong essay on Marxist theory begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad summary of Marx's ideas. The most persuasive papers select a specific institution, text, or social phenomenon and demonstrate concretely how Marxist concepts — such as class, ideology, or alienation — illuminate something that other frameworks might miss. Evidence drawn from primary historical or sociological sources carries more weight than vague generalization. The most common pitfall is treating the theory as self-evidently correct rather than engaging critically with its assumptions and limitations.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Communism Fail? To the General
To the general public one of the greatest shocks at the end of the twentieth century was the demise of the power of the Soviet Union. "the greatest surprise of the end of the twentieth century has been the suddenness…
Paper High School
Karl Marx\'s View of Class
This paper explains the basic principle of Marxist philosophy based on the belief that all human societal dynamics and evolution are traceable to economic theory and to economic classes, relationships, and consequences. It outlines Marxism and the concept of class in society and the process by which, according to Marx, a large underclass would eventually revolt against the upper class. It also explains how Capitalism, in Marx's view, alienates workers psychologically from themselves as well as from their work.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Mao Zedong Born on December
Born on December 26, 1893, in Hunan province, Mao Zedong was a product of rural China. Lacking access to a telephone, a telegraph system, or even a local newspaper, he had to rely on his own devices in shaping his own…
Paper Undergraduate
Communication Individual and Group Skills
Nonverbal communication involves those nonverbal things that are in a communication setting that are generated by both the source- the speaker and his or her use of the environment and that have potential message value…
Research Paper Doctorate
Gestalt therapy: principles and applications
Gestalt therapy emerged from a multitude of philosophical, theoretical, scientific, and cultural roots. As a product of the early twentieth century, it would be impossible to divorce the evolution of Gestalt therapy…
Research Paper Undergraduate
College Males Tend to Objectify
No matter what the atmosphere might have been at home, at college, the American male finds himself in an environment where he is surrounded with sexually-explicit stimuli, such as advertisements, posters, magazines,…
Essay Doctorate
Marxist Media Theory: Hegemony and Mediatization
This paper looks at specific questions. 1. Marxist media theorists discuss the media in terms of their role as ‘ideological apparatuses'. Explain the key notions behind this research, paying particular attention to the concept of hegemony and the media's role within it. What is ‘hegemony', and why is it important to audience studies? 2. Ross and Nightingale argue ‘audience research is a vehicle for monitoring the impact of both the Mediatization of human senses and the industrialization of the productive capacity of the media'. Using examples, briefly discuss the term Mediatization.
Paper Undergraduate
Karl Marx and Frederick Engels
Karl Marx and Frederick Engels argue for the empowerment of workers in the Communist Manifesto. The historical context in which Marx and Engels wrote was one in which labor was devalued and the owners of the means of…
Paper Doctorate
Crime on March 9th, 2013, Two New
This essay considers the recent killing of Kimani Gray by NYPD officers from different criminological perspectives. Specifically, it considers the relative merits of social disorganization and Marxist theory in predicting and preventing the kind of crime that occurred as a result of Gray's killing. Ultimately, while social disorganization theory can help explain Gray's higher risk for criminality, Marxist theory is necessary to account for the public response to the killing.
Paper Doctorate
Economic Crisis Policies US Current Economic Crisis
US current economic crisis is considered to be started from real estate sector. The real sector started to decline in 2006 and it accelerated in 2007 and 2008. Housing prices have fallen from the peak from about 25 percent so far. The decline in prices left homeowners with no option and they were unable to refinance their mortgages and causes default of mortgages. This default of mortgages and loans swallowed the banks and financial markets such as falling of Lehman's brothers and other Banks and blow to rest of economy happened as the whole economy was relying on banks and ultimately it slows down investment in the country and capital flows to other parts of the world like China and India. Bank losses cause reduction of bank capital which in turn requires capital reduction thus saving bank from lending. It is estimated that every $100 loss and reduction of bank capital would cause $1trillion reduction in bank lending. (ISR international socialist review, 2009)