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== Sources for "any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis" ==
{{old heading|Unsupported lede claim that the conspiracy theory doesn't have "any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis"}}

What sources support this claim?

The cited source (Braune 2019) says: "The term does appear very occasionally in Marxist literature, but there is no pattern of using it to point specifically to the Frankfurt School"--this is a specific claim about the Frankfurt School, not the concept of Marxist cultural analysis as a whole.

In fact, other sources specifically identify a clear relationship between the conspiracy theory and Marxist cultural analysis:
* Jamin 2018: "When looking at the literature on Cultural Marxism as a piece of cultural studies, as a conspiracy described by Lind and its followers, and as arguments used by Buchanan, Breivik, and other actors within their own agendas, we see a common ground made of unquestionable facts in terms of who did what and where, and for how long at the Frankfurt School."
* Tutors 2018: "In an ironical sense this literature can perhaps be understood as popularizing simplified or otherwise distorted versions of certain concepts initially developed by the Frankfurt School, as well as those of Western Marxism more generally." ] (]) 20:54, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
::The full quote from Braune is {{tq|Furthermore, there is no academic field known as “Cultural Marxism.” Scholars of the Frankfurt School are called Critical Theorists, not Cultural Marxists. Scholars in various other fields that often get lumped into the “Cultural Marxist” category, such as postmodernists and feminist scholars, also do not generally call their fields of study Cultural Marxism, nor do they share perfect ideological symmetry with Critical Theory. The term does appear very occasionally in Marxist literature, but there is no pattern of using it to point specifically to the Frankfurt School--Marxist philosopher of aesthetics Frederic Jameson, forexample, uses the term, but his use of the term “cultural” refers to his aesthetics, not to a specific commitment to the Frankfurt School. In short, Cultural Marxism does not exist—not only is the conspiracy theory version false, but there is no intellectual movement by that name.}} Her overall point is that those scattered usages are without coherent meaning, and that the usage in the conspiracy theory is not connected to any real-world ideological framework. Jamin and Tutors don't disagree; Jamin's point is that the conspiracy theoriests are consistent ''with each other'', not with reality. And if you read the next sentence of Tutors, it is clear the irony he is talking about is the way in which the conspiracy theorists themselves fit into the Frankfurt School's view; {{tq|One such example might be the concept of “the Cathedral” (Yarvin 2008), developed by figures in the so-called neo-reactionary movement on the far right as a kind of critique of the hegemonic, unconscious consensus between powerful figures within academia and the media who use the concept of “political correctness” as a tool of oppression developed by those who (falsely) imagine themselves as being oppressed.}} He is saying that the irony is this mode of analysis is in line with what the Frankfurt school believed, not that the conspiracy theory itself has merit. --] (]) 21:03, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
:*I’m not convinced that the claim “without any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis” is adequately supported by the cited source. As OP notes, the Braune paper does not assert any claims about “Marxist cultural analysis” as a whole. Instead, the quoted statement specifically references “the Frankfurt School.” If we are now equating the two, how do we justify the existence of a separate article on “Marxist cultural analysis”?
::
::There is another logical inconsistency. Braune states that {{tq|the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory misrepresents the Frankfurt School’s ideas and influence.}} Logically, if A misrepresents B, then A must have at least one clearly defined relationship with B, meaning it misrepresents it. Therefore, it is contradictory to claim that there is no clear relationship between the two.
::
::Thirdly, to highlight another logical inconsistency: if there is no (clear) relationship between “Marxist cultural analysis” and “Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory,” then why do these two Misplaced Pages articles extensively link to each other?
::
::Lastly, I searched for the term 'clear relationship' and found an archived discussion from 2021 that includes this phrase. Unfortunately, that discussion quickly devolved into arguments about the conspiracy theory. Here, I hope we can stay focused on this article and the specific issue of consistency with logic and sources. ] (]) 12:07, 26 October 2024 (UTC)
:::You must be new to Misplaced Pages, Welcome to Misplaced Pages! What you're confused about is called Wikivoice. One of the statements is us ''REPORTING ''on Braune's viewpoint (aka an ]). The other is in Wikivoice. For more information, click this link to the policy: ]. I hope that clears things up for you. P.S Also, usually new additions to the discussion, or new comments on the talk page go at the bottom of a page as per ], Misplaced Pages has a lot of these policies and guidelines, and your time here will involve less conflict if you learn about them. ] (]) 01:13, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
::::Also, just adding to this, they're usually easier to learn about if you sign up an account - because you'll be told about them, and given other helpful tips on your talk page. ] (]) 01:26, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
:That information is already included in the third paragraph of the lede section:
:<blockquote>''"The tradition of Marxist cultural analysis has also been referred to as "cultural Marxism", and "Marxist cultural theory", in reference to Marxist ideas about culture. However, since the 1990s, the term "Cultural Marxism" has largely referred to the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory, a conspiracy theory popular among the far right without any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis."''<blockquote>
:So Misplaced Pages has already done its due diligence to represent the major academic viewpoints in as accurate manner as possible for this topic. ] (]) 03:21, 19 October 2024 (UTC)

=== Poll ===
How should we address the issue raised in this discussion?
# Do nothing.
# Remove the phrase “without any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis” from the sentence.
# Replace it with: “However, since the 1990s, the term 'Cultural Marxism' has frequently been associated with Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory embraced by the far right, which distorts the ideas and impact of the Frankfurt School.”
# Something else (please specify).

Shall we take a poll? ] (]) 10:12, 30 October 2024 (UTC)

*'''Option 3''', because it clarifies the original sentence and is closer to what the source (Braune 2019) states: {{tq|the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory misrepresents the Frankfurt School’s ideas and influence.}} :] (]) 10:13, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 1''' - no clear reasons to change the sentence have been presented in this discussion, and option 3 in particular presents a (sourced) statement out of context, in wikivoice, in a way that posits a determinate relationship between the conspiracy theory and the Frankfurt School in a way the sources, taken as a whole, do not support. ] (]) 00:31, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
*:'''Seconded.''' There's still no clear ideological, political, or academic movement calling its self "Cultural Marxism". No academics identify that way. So Braune is accurate to the academic viewpoint. ] (]) 06:40, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 1''' or '''remove the final paragraph of the lead entirely''' (that is, remove any mention of cultural marxism in any context from the lead completely) per my arguments above. Perhaps some rewording is possible, but I'm not seeing any of these as an improvement; a central point in the sources is that the conspiracy theory is not connected to reality and that "cultural marxism" isn't a concretely-defined thing, which needs to be clearly conveyed if we are going to mention it at all. The connection is tenuous enough that it would also be reasonable to remove it from the lead; it's just not leadworthy. --] (]) 15:42, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
*:Unless it's covered by high-quality sources on Marxist cultural analysis, I support removal of the conspiracy theory from the lead and the article. ] (]) 18:12, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 3''', because this is important enough to mention in the lead, and reliable sources are in agreement that there is some connection between the conspiracy theory and ideas from the Frankfurt School. Could maybe tweak the wording somehow to emphasize that the connection between the two is imprecise, but to deny that any connection exists is plainly wrong and contradicts the sources. —- ] (]) 02:34, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
*:Re: {{tq|reliable sources are in agreement that there is some connection between the conspiracy theory and ideas from the Frankfurt School}} - they aren't, though. That's the whole problem. There isn't any particular connection between the FS and the CT, except for some misleading name dropping. ] (]) 09:00, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
*::It can be argued that A misrepresenting B isn't a real relationship, but that leads us into semantics. It's better to use clearer language to avoid confusing the reader. ''Misrepresents ''is clearer than "without any clear relationship," and it's the phrasing currently used in the CT article lede. ] (]) 09:59, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
*'''Option 1''' and strongly '''Oppose 3'''. The conspiracy theory has no relationship with the Frankfurt school, as it has no relationship to anything actually real. That the conspiracy theory use "cultural Marxism" and "Frankfurt school" is in no way meaningful, they are just words used as dog whistles without any real connection to the actual subjects. -- <small>LCU</small> ''']''' <small>''«]» °]°''</small> 12:39, 7 November 2024 (UTC)

== Historical vs Contemporary ==

I've created this temporary division on the page whilst the discussion on what counts as Marxist cultural analysis continues to sort its self out. As a rule of thumb; if a theorist/school uses or comes after the creation of Gramsci's sense of hegemony, it's probably contemporary. If not, it's probably historical. Keep in mind this page should be for the ] (which does discuss the "profit driven" aspects of Capitalist hegemony), and we should keep that in mind as we want to avoid becoming a ] article. ] (]) 03:24, 27 October 2024 (UTC)

:Trotsky (1879 – 1940) and Gramsci (1891 – 1937) were contemporaries. If categorization and subdivision is needed, it should probably use different labels than Historical vs Contemporary. ] (]) 18:03, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
::Trotsky doesn't use the term hegemony, and thus, isn't really known for having done a modern, sociological version of Marxist cultural analysis. The main jumping off point for this page is Gramsci, and descendant theories, such as The Frankfurt School, The Birmingham School, and E. P. Thompson. You can read the lead section to understand the primary topic, and definition of terms that make up the subject matter intended for this page. ] (]) 05:01, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
:::*The mid-20th century is not “contemporary”.
:::*EP Thompson’s work is not derived from Gramsci but from other traditions.
:::] (]) 05:14, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
:Hi! I appreciate the effort to organize the article. Do you by chance have a source to support this distinction? I don't have a particular problem with it other than it seems weird to call someone who died in 1937 a contemporary of us in the 21st century. This cut-off would also relegate the other major figure featured in the lead (but conspicuously absent in the body), early Lukaćs, to history. Maybe that's not a problem, but it feels a bit arbitrary.
:Cheers, ] (]) 18:05, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
::Actually, Lukaćs uses the term <u>hegemony</u> throughout (but of course, this is just the English translators choice in 1972, almost 50 years after it was originally written), I'm not that familiar with how much he references the industrialization of the mechanisms of cultural reproduction (eg. culture as an industrial function of Capitalism) - but I think given that he seemingly discusses cultural hegemony in some way that could be translated, then by virtue of that you're free to include him in the contemporary section (at least, that's how I see this suggested division playing out). I don't want to be too strict with this. I'm assuming the reasons Lukaćs hasn't been included thus far is because he's not as influential or well known as Gramsci and The Frankfurt School et al.
::I don't personally see the use of 'hegemony' as being an arbitrary inclusion requirement for a theorist to be seen as 'contemporary' (although if it comes down to a question of translation, it does become more arbitrary). Either way, to me it's simply coherent with the lead section. The lead section appears to be an enduring aspect of the page, and hence crucial to the subject matter within the ''contemporary'' context (especially in regards to Sociology and Neo-Marxism).
::I believe concessions were given in the above section (eg. {{tq|"It never occurred to me, for instance, that Trotsky did not belong; yet the IP editor makes a compelling case."}}) but I don't want to step on any toes, and I think it's a complex topic area that we're all being careful to not limit too much - whilst still having some direction (and my suggestion is just that we follow the lead). My understanding is still that the article was intended to be about contemporary Marxist cultural analysis WITHIN the sociological context, and that even that much is a misnomer, as all ''Marxist cultural analysis'' is almost by definition Neo-Marxist (Karl Marx having not done much cultural analysis at all).
::But you are indeed correct - it feels odd to say theories from the 1930s are contemporary. In my view this is more a problem of just how effective Cold War propaganda was on American (and hence global) cultural hegemony, WW2 is often a common demarcation and turning point for the consideration of what is "contemporary". It defined a lot of the new western mode of global analysis, internationalism, and trade. We (as in the cultural majority) are only just now catching up to the theorists of back then, but if you have less questionable terms for the headings, I'm all for finding a better match. "Pre-hegemonic theory" and "Post-hegemonic theory" might be more direct for instance (albeit, not a traditional division that Misplaced Pages pages commonly use).
::Sorry if this response is not satisfying, I suppose another option would be to use Pre-WW2 and Post-WW2, and have sections for Gramsci and Lukaćs in the former, making it a purely chronological division. ] (]) 05:27, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
:::Thanks for this detailed reply!
:::It is a Misplaced Pages guideline (and I think a very good one) that ]. (''Edit: that's actually an individually authored essay, but it is largely an explication of ]''.) Unless there is a literature that supports limiting this article more narrowly than what is included in anthologies and introductions to Marxist cultural/aesthetic/literary analysis/theory/studies, I believe the article should be open to encompass all material commonly included in such overview publications, and the lead should be edited accordingly.
:::Lukaćs is widely credited with reinjecting Hegel into Marx, whom he additionally synthesized with Weber. There would be no Frankfurt School without him. Per just my own reading of ''History and Class Consciousness'', I do not believe that "hegemony" is a key term for him. What he does is theorize ''commodity fetishism'' as an empirical totality under the heading of ''reification'', which he presents as the form of ''false consciousness'' that must be overcome by a genuine class consciousness.
:::None of that (of course!) is at all on you to add, but is just to say that he theorizes independently and in a significantly different way what is at least more-or-less the same phenomenon as Gramsci. This is low on my to-do list because I don't have a great source ready to hand, but I'll add a section on him at some point in the future if no one beats me to it.
:::I don't have any proposals with respect to section headings and organization—other than that I think we should continue to keep it chronological, absent a strong reason to do otherwise. We should probably also remove the maintenance template added in response to the addition of Trotsky. The way that he is treated in the lead should probably be adjusted as well to avoid overstating his influence on the Western tradition stemming from Lukaćs and Gramsci.
:::Cheers, ] (]) 17:11, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
::::Lead did follow body until someone decided that the title of the page referenced all of Marxist cultural theory, because they didn't understand that the title was actually a way of avoiding the Neologism "Cultural Marxism" whose primary topic was a conspiracy theory, and hence problematic under ]. This was one of the reasons the original Cultural Marxism page was deleted, , and one of the reasons that title can't be used (because it was salted ]).
::::So a much more efficient and effective way to make the lead follow the body, would be to delete the sections that go against the purpose of the page up until now (eg. everything under the "Historical Approaches" section), and rename the page.
::::What your proposing (re-writing the lead to fit new additions that have been made to the body) would break it's relevance to the ] page, and drastically change the direction of the page. So it seems, we really have an issue with the title of the current page, which should perhaps be changed to "Gramscian cultural analysis".
::::Rather than straining to make additions to the page, and risking turning it into a coatrack for any Marxist past or present who remotely touches on, or mentions culture (regardless of whether those comments formed a solid theory or mode of analysis), I move that we simply re-title the page. That way we can keep the current lead, and majority of the contents, and avoid recreating the ] page or making a ] here. After all it's clear neither of us have time for a large amount of copy editing right now.
::::Do you oppose this path forwards? If so, it may be a time for an RfC, to take the burden of deciding the fate of this page off our shoulders, and we can have it instead put on the wider community where it perhaps belongs. But if you don't oppose this path forwards, I'm happy to discuss what the appropriate naming should be, and then to get that done. ] (]) 04:54, 29 October 2024 (UTC)

Contemporary to what? ] (]) 18:05, 29 October 2024 (UTC)

:The usage of the term "Hegemony" and the idea that culture is "mechanically reproduced". As per the lead. eg. Gramscian marxist analysis as being a landmark or watershed that altered the history of Marxist analysis from then on. ] (]) 08:45, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
:: So the 1920s and the 1930s. But the 2 subsections of «Historical approaches» are about the 1920s and the 1930s too («Marxist-Leninist analysis of culture during the 1920s and 1930s», «In Literature and Revolution , Leon Trotsky»), so your titles are incorrect. If you want to distinguish groups/persons who carried Marxist cultural analysis and groups/persons who carried something similar but different, then a correct title would be «Similar approaches» instead of «Historical approaches». ] (]) 10:42, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
:::This raises the question of why we have historical approaches at all, like Trotsky and Marxist-Leninism just isn't a classification The Frankfurt School and post-Gramscian cultural theory fits into.
:::People have just added that to the page because they've looked at the title and assumed it belongs here. So the question is - does it? We could change the name of the page to resolve this, or just allow the page to be a ] of Marxists who have discussed culture. ] (]) 06:45, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
:::: «{{tq|This raises the question of why we have historical approaches at all}}» => The section was titled «Development of theory» from the creation of the article in 2020 to ] in february 2024. ] (]) 08:32, 31 October 2024 (UTC)


== Projects and notices == == Coatrack. ==


At this point the article has become a coatrack. It now starts with Leon Trotsky (for some reason), being classed as a "main author" (of what?) along side Gramsci, The Frankfurt School, who specifically said they wanted to be "equidistant from Marxism, and Capitalism" , and The Birmingham School, which was in part founded by Richard Hoggart who expressed an aversion to Marxism . The page has two side bars. It has tacked on sections at the end for Marxist-Leninism, and the cultural Marxism conspiracy theory. The title of the page is clearly too broad for what it was intended to be (what the lead section describes, or once described), and we now have too many editors trying to go in too many different directions with it.
I hope someone else will set up this Talk page appropriately, and add appropriate projects and notices. ] (]) 19:01, 30 November 2020 (UTC)


In short it's become an unmanageable ] and should probably be deleted. ] (]) 12:49, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
: I'd really appreciate if someone could set up this Talk page with appropriate notices and projects; I don't know how to do it! Not that I "created" the article - just the Talk page. ] (]) 20:41, 4 December 2020 (UTC)


== Mischaracterization of major thinkers. ==
== More recent developments section ==


The majority of theorists on this page, weren't Marxists. Many explicitly weren't Marxists (as per the previous section of this talk page)... they were NEO-Marxists at best, and some weren't even that. Thus, it's inappropriate for Misplaced Pages to be labeling and categorizing thinkers, theorists, and historical figures, as ''Marxist'' when they weren't Marxists. Getting basic categorization correct isn't too much to ask, and isn't unreasonable. These thinkers really shouldn't be bookended by Trotsky and Marxist-leninism as if that was their domain. ] (]) 02:05, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
I recognize that edit removed - along with lots of dreck and misleading claims - some relevant sources. I don't have any problem with the section being expanded and some of the sources added back in, with the proviso that misleading claims (such as the use made of Jameson, 2007, which made a complete hash of the source) and COATRACK elements (such as the prior discussion of media literacy) be avoided. ] (]) 19:07, 30 November 2020 (UTC)


:See ]. It doesn't matter whether these people were Marxists, but that they were identified as cultural Marxists. The West Indies isn't actually off the coast of India, but we can refer to people as West Indian. ] (]) 02:57, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
== Section on the conspiracy theory ==
::Leon Trotsky and "Marxist Leninism" was never identified as "cultural Marxism". Gramscian cultural analysis was (eg. people influenced by Gramsci, like The Frankfurt School, The Birminham School, and E.P Thompson). "Marxist cultural analysis" is just Misplaced Pages's term, due to "Cultural Marxism" being most well known as a right wing ] Neologism. So someone randomly chose an alternative they thought matched enough. But they didn't foresee the consequences.
::Trying to preserve the term "Marxist cultural analysis" when it's just Misplaced Pages's arbitrary choice for the article (eg. it's our choice, not the prevalent academic term for Gramscians) doesn't make any sense. Misplaced Pages's chosen term, isn't accurate... I agree the page is essentially supposed to be about "cultural Marxism" (The Frankfurt School, The Birminham School, and E.P Thompson) - but Trotsky and the section for "Marxist Leninism" don't belong here then, and shouldn't be included.
::They've been included because the page title Misplaced Pages has landed on, is too general. It should be changed to "Gramscian cultural analysis" (and the redirect on ] updated accordingly). '''WITHOUT''' doing THAT, you have a general sounding page title, that doesn't retain its original function. So it includes a section on Trotsky, and Marxist-leninism for no real good reason (other than the arbitrary page title ], allowing them to be included, because it's now a broader topic than it should be.] (]) 06:05, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
:::] is averaging less than 1 view/day and could be cannibalized to improve coverage of Gramsci in this area. I'm not sure why, though, you think this article is properly about him and his heirs/successors/whatever. Why not just let it be whatever is covered in an introductory cultural studies course on Marxist theory?
:::The problem is that the body is underdeveloped and doesn't appear to follow any particular secondary literature. My approach would be to look at a few anthologies or introductory overview sources. The figures or schools that receive the most attention in the most of them are what should be covered here. Surely this would include precursors such as Marx himself and perhaps Trotsky as well.
:::But no one is asking me for an assignment...so, over and out.
:::Cheers, ] (]) 19:50, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
::::I stated directly above that several of the thinkers/groups listed weren't particularly Marxist, and can best be described as neo-Marxist OR LESS. Such as Hoggart (of The Birmingham School) whose described in academic sources as having an ''aversion'' to Marxism ... and The Frankfurt School who are widely understood to have been critical of both Capitalism AND orthodox Marxism, wanting to be (as the ) ''equidistant'' and critical of both systems (''"The final break with '''orthodox Marxism''' occurred with the Frankfurt School’s coming to condemn the Soviet Union as a politically oppressive system. Politically the Frankfurt School sought to position itself equidistant from both Soviet socialism and liberal capitalism. The greater cause of human emancipation appeared to call for the relentless criticism of both systems.''").
::::So to proclaim them as a major part of ''MARXIST'' cultural analysis, is a falsification of their position. This (along with my other complaints to you about Trosky's inclusion) is precisely why I don't think the page title is appropriate, and is in fact, a mischaracterization of the bulk of the authors being used (eg. from The Frankfurt School, and Birmingham School).
::::Saying "we can just add more thinkers" doesn't resolve the problems with their inclusion. Removing Trotsky and this silly little stub section about "Marxist-lenism" and renaming the page to Gramscian cultural analysis DOES resolve these issues (and is a lot easier, doesn't require handing out assignments, or cannibalising other pages).
::::P.S Misplaced Pages isn't about the popularity or view count of pages, saying "this page gets less views, so we should canibalise it" goes against being here to ] and encyclopedia, which is suppose to be a repository of authoritative knowledge, not a popularity contest, or a website for only the knowledge which is popular or widely viewed/clicked/desirable. ] (]) 04:54, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::I support development of this article's coverage of Gramsci. Copying from the article I mentioned would be one very easy way to do this, and I'm sure the original contributors would be happy to expand the reach of their work. (For instance, the Frankfurt School section was lifted from my own rewrite of the lead to that article. My reaction was basically just "Lazy, but sure, fine—I did a decent job with that sentence.")
:::::Although I will probably check in on this article from time-to-time, I am unfollowing. The discussion here is too rarely about improving the actual article. Those reading this should be aware that I am extremely unlikely to support renaming or deleting this article. Please don't ask. Feel free, though, tag me in any discussion about improving the article.
:::::Cheers, ] (]) 13:31, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::I’ve trimmed Hoggart. There are no non-Marxist thinkers now taking up space. Frankfurt School were Marxist; they broke with ] not with Marxism. Have also slightly expanded Gramsci. ] (]) 04:48, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::Sorry I didn’t expand Gramsci. I expanded content about him in the Birmingham sdxifoj. His section could still do with more adding. I also expanded Frankfurt section. ] (]) 05:09, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::No offense, don't make the article flow better or easier to read - and it's not a good idea to try to remove Hoggart as if he wasn't part of The Birmingham School when he (along with Raymond Williams) was one of the two founding members. ] (]) 05:56, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::The IP comment seems to assume that the scope of this page is (or ought to be) "Gramscian cultural analysis", but that doesn't reflect reality or this article's sources. Of the main groups discussed in the article, only the Birmingham School is (mostly) Gramscian. In so far as the Frankfurt School share a common intellectual heritage, that would be Lukacs (e.g., his Hegelian Marxism), not Gramsci. And I can't think of any of the Marxist Humanists who carry any particular Gramscian influence (though they were all by definition Marxists, and some were also Hegelian).
:::::The IP comment also carries the odd implication that Soviet Marxism and/or "Orthodox Marxism" are the ''real'' Marxism, but when it comes to cultural analysis that simply isn't the case. The question whether Frankfurt or Birmingham scholars performed ''Marxist'' analysis of culture (a concept that includes what some more nitpicky writers have called ''Marxisant'' analysis) - well, that's a question for the literature, and to the best of my knowledge the literature says that they did. ] (]) 05:28, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::Pretending Gramsci and Hegel are somehow competing schools is a false dichotomy. Most Gramscians are Hegelians. The polemics of class politics is kind of ingrained in the idea of hegemony, that there might be a popular or ruling class culture, then a working class culture that competes with it. That's obviously a Hegelian position Gramsci is taking. ] (]) 05:53, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::This allegation that Gramsci was a Hegelian, and that his thought somehow paralleled that of Lukacs who influenced the first generation of the Frankfurt School, is unsupported by evidence and looks to be ]. ] (]) 10:30, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Yes well, @] the critical theorists are now apparently cast as Orthodox Marxists, and Hoggart has been removed from The Birmingham School - as per the thread immediate above this one ({{tq|"I’ve trimmed Hoggart"}}). Immediately below this one, you have Patrick saying he wants to put Trotsky back in. Have fun with all this re-writing of history, it's what you wanted for the "Critical Theorists" isn't it? ] (]) 00:56, 14 November 2024 (UTC)


== Consensus ==
We have a section on the conspiracy theory, which has its own article. I am troubled by the assumption of anti-Semitism. Now, as far as I can tell there is no definitive version of the theory about (there is no shadowy organisation organising it!) so there would have to be a solid, fundamental element to call it that. There are Anti-Semites who cling to the theory; all conspiracies attract them. However anti-Semitism Anti-Semitism is a serious charge and so we are accusing a lot of people.


@] @] - so you've both made these weird additions to the page then run away? You've created a quagmire but don't want to defend it here? You just want to recreate the article on ], cast founders of Critical Theory as just simple Marxists, not particularly doing a new kind of cultural analysis: a ]. But instead lump them in with Marx, Lenin, Trotsky... ''Stalin? Mao?'' Where are you guys drawing the line on this - if anywhere? Basically you're saying - the modern left are communists. Not in so many words, but you're essentially saying: They have the same theories and use the same form of analysis AS COMMUNISTS (which ignores their ] OF ])...
If we take the Holocaust Memorial Trust's definition of Anti-Semitism, what element of the concept is within that? As far as I can see, no element of the theory (if I understand it correctly) has any reference to Jewish people. Anti-Semites will have their own version and mix it up with bits of the ] fraud, but that's just them.


...you're saying, they don't need to appeal to hegemony, and that's not a particular characteristic of their pursuit, they're just Marxists, just like Trotsky, Lenin, Mao... that's what '''''YOU TWO''''' ''specific authors/editors'' have argued and supported on this page. Now you're just running away. Just lumping the founders of modern left-wing theory, with the indefensible nature of Leninism, Maoism, and Stalinism, and then running away as if that's right? That's OUTRAGEOUS is what it is, tantamount to little more than VANDALISM. There's no reason for a ] coatrack to be recreated here.... and if you're not going to argue these points when there's CLEAR AND OBVIOUS AND EXTENSIVE OBJECTIONS, and REASONABLE SOURCE BASED ARGUMENTS AGAINST IT! Then I see no reason your personal opinions (and that's what they are) should hold sway here. Especially and particularly if you're not going to do the copy writing to make clearer your distinctions, or why say, Mao's cultural analysis might be different from Habermas' - if you're just going to do the damage and run away without addressing these things, these arguments AGAINST what you've done, well that's not really a consensus. Consensus is formed by ARGUMENTATION, '''NOT THE POPULAR VOTE'''. ] (]) 23:04, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
If you disagree, can you set out what the theory actually states and show there is an element that necessarily includes an accusation against Jewish people or any race or culture come to that?


:I'm afraid I do not understand this comment. My actual position is that this article needs to follow the high-quality sources (i.e., scholarship) on the various Marxist traditions offering analysis of culture, in some rough proportionality to the way those traditions are covered in this scholarship.
The battle against conspiracy theories is a serious one, and flailing about won't help. ] (]) 20:24, 4 December 2020 (UTC)
:By my reading of that scholarship, most of the Marxist analyses scholars incorporate when discussing this topic take the form of "critique", including Hegelian Marxist (Frankfurt School), Gramscian, and Marxist Humanist traditions (only a portion of which would normally be considered as "Western Marxism"). Some scholars incorporate Marxist theories of culture from before Lukacs and Gramsci, potentially including classical Marxist, Orthodox, and Leninist or Trotskyite approaches. Likewise, I believe some scholars include such later developments as Critical Theory (post-Marcuse), Socialist Feminist analysis, and Laclau&Mouffe-style post-Marxist approaches to cultural critique.
:In my view, all of these elements belong here ''to the extent that scholarship supports their inclusion''. It is my impression that scholarship does not notably support the inclusion of explicitly Stalinist or Maoist approaches, so I'm not at the moment convinced that they should be included (I say "avowedly" here to pre-empt arguments that "X scholar was a member of a 3rd International party/promoted Maoist causes and therefore should be excluded based on their political affiliation" - I don't see those facts as relevant to determining what contributions are or aren't part of an intellectual tradition).
:Also, I am deeply puzzled by the reference here to {{tq|CLEAR AND OBVIOUS AND EXTENSIVE OBJECTIONS}} - objections to what? If the allegation is that clear, obvious and extensive objections have been raised ''to the existence of this article'' - well, that issue isn't really on topic for this Talk page. If these supposedly "clear" objections are focused on some more specific aspect, I'd really appreciate being told what aspect that is.
:The final confusion I have about this comment is that it treats Western Marxism as though it were all Gramscian and based on the concept of hegemony, which is demonstrably false and therefore makes it harder for me to triangulate where the IP's comment is intended to lead. ] (]) 00:58, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
::I completely agree with NewImpartial. OP in this thread is also pretty abusive. ] (]) 04:50, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
::I've already told you (and it's noted in the copy of the article) that multiple authors referenced on the page aren't Marxists. The majority are Neo-Marxists, and some are explicitly not-Marxist (eg. Hoggart, Habermas).
::It's also clear that ALL of the theorists are from or related to the Gramscian school of cultural analysis. The only one that wasn't - was Trotsky, and he was correctly hat noted, as perhaps not being relevant.
::He's not relevant (was not a Gramscian, nor was he particularly doing a cultural analysis, he was writing about a Utopian vision he had for culture). The lead has always referenced components of Gramscian cultural analysis. This mischaracterization of these thinkers, has now been corrected by moving the page.
::'''HOWEVER''' - I whole heartly support you, and who ever else is interested in the project, creating another page which is more widely focused on Marxist cultural theory in general. But that's never been the scope of this page. The theorists on this page, have always centered around Gramsci, hegemony, and the eras in which the mechanical reproduction of culture by industry became noteworthy, under the term the ].
::Again I want to ENTHUSIASTICALLY ENDORSE, your idea of having a wider page that covers all strains of Marxist cultural analysis. ''However'' that was never the intention behind this page. As soon as this page was created, it was used as a hatnote on ] and is referenced on the talk page there, MANY TIMES, as being the more realistic take on The Frankfurt School, Gramsci, and the other thinkers who were interested in the effects of hegemony in the ]. ] (]) 05:49, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
:::The IP makes a number of mistaken statements here, including that {{tq|As soon as this page was created, it was used as a hatnote on Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory}}. This isn't so. And none of the claims made by the IP qualify as "clear" or "obvious"; they read rather as an idiosyncratic ] objection to mainstream scholarship on this topic.
:::As noted previously, the argument that all those discussed in this article (except Trotsky) are Gramscians is blatantly false; so is the assumption that "Neo-Marxist" and "Marxist" are mutually exclusive categories. Therefore, I have reverted the undiscussed page move, for which I have seen no support on Talk apart from the IP. ] (]) 10:38, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
::::'''Well NewImpartial, now that you've made your bed, you'll have to sleep in it.'''
::::Soon this page will become a ] and there'll be not possibility of drawing a line for what can or can't be included. It will become less and less of an appropriate hat note for the ] page.
::::...and by the way, this page was actually created from a DRAFT of a Cultural Marxism article - which can be found here - but for some reason you yourself blanked. So whether you admit it or not - this page was originally written to only include thinkers relevant to that term. ] (]) 12:08, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::While there were problems with early drafts of this article - which I tried to address with my edits of November 2020 - I don't think any version of it was especially dependent on material from Jobrot's draft, which I blanked after they became inactive. ] (]) 14:21, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
::::I don't have particularly strong feelings about it, but I would support restoring the Trotsky material, perhaps as a "precursor" theorist. Aside from being a major figure in his own right, he's at least sometimes anthologized on cultural stuff. ] (]) 18:17, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::Well Patrick, you, Newimpartial, and BobFromBrockley currently have the consensus. So you're free to add back in Trotsky, and whatever other Marxists you see fit at your leisure. I'll be stepping away from the two articles on here I've been involved with. ] (]) 00:58, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
::{{tq|It is my impression that scholarship does not notably support the inclusion of explicitly Stalinist or Maoist approaches.}} @]
::Stalin and Mao didn't have notable approaches to cultural analysis? You are aware of the ] right? Or ]. How does that not fit with the current title, which is apparently supposed to be a catch all for Marxist cultural theories. Why do Mao and Stalin fall out of that purview? Plenty has been written on the techniques of cultural manipulation performed by both Mao and Stalin. Why shouldn't the scholarship around Stalin's Speech (via his representative) Andrei Zhdanov, to the 1934 Soviet Writers Congress , be included as an expression of ''his'' "Marxist cultural analysis"????? Like, if you want the page title to be about that - there's no limits between Stalin and Habermas. Nothing in between them. ] (]) 20:24, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
:::To answer your question, {{tq|notable approaches to cultural analysis}} does not, in my view, equate to {{tq|a catch all for Marxist cultural theories}}. I suspect you aren't a fan of the term "critique", but there is an evident difference between the analysis of culture performed by a Benjamin or a Gramsci, and "cultural theories" of Stalinist or Maoist varieties - or even Constructivist or Situationist cultural theories (which I personally find much more amenable). This isn't a matter of Marxist critique=ILIKEIT and Marxist cultural creation=IDONTLIKEIT, either; I really like Constructivism, as should be clear from my tattoos, and I find a lot to like about Situationism as well. But they don't belong here, because while they are cultural projects they aren't in any important sense cultural ''analysis''.
:::You can read ] as ] applied to cultural creation, and that doesn't make Bragg cultural analysis, either - but Thompson definitely is.
:::<small>Also, as an aside, to preempt some of the discussion in the IP's more recent section: none of the choices to be made in this article's content and terminology ought to be settled by leaning into any supposed conventions emerging from disciplinary sociology. The best scholarship on Marxism is basically not by sociologists, while the best scholarship produced out of the sociological imagination in this area is by political sociologists, who do not generally observe those conventions. More fundamentally, the idea that Marxist ideas can be vivisected and divided into separate impacts on economic, political and social thought is absurd; Marxist cultural analysis is a good example of an instance where political economy (q.v. "mechanical reproduction"), sociology and philosophy intermingle - or rather, they cannot really be distinguished at all. </small>] (]) 21:03, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
::::My god I find Billy Bragg to be cringe worthy. ] (]) 04:27, 15 November 2024 (UTC)


== Cultural Marxism disambiguation ==
: This question has been thoroughly answered at ] and in that article as it currently stands. There is no need to do the ] proposed by Hogweard. However, we are not supposed per policy to rely on the references in other articles for claims that could be questioned (like this one), so one of the best references on the antisemitic character of the conspiracy should be added to this article as well. ] (]) 20:39, 4 December 2020 (UTC)


::I will have a look over at that one. ] (]) 20:50, 4 December 2020 (UTC) Somebody created a page at ] last week, pointing to this page and the conspiracy theory by that name. How do other editors feel about this? ] (]) 23:06, 9 November 2024 (UTC)


:This is a multi-page ] . I suggest moving the discussion to ]. ] (]) 23:28, 9 November 2024 (UTC)
== Clarificarion Needed ==


== ] has an ]==
Does this page seek to be about Marxist Cultural Analysis, a rather broad term which could span anywhere from post-modernist positions to Orthodox radical African revolutionary Marxism, to variants on fascist communist theory, which is impossibly broad for a Misplaced Pages page - or does this page seek to recreate content that's been forbidden elsewhere. It seems to be re-creating a lot of SALTED content about Cultural Marxism. This is far too pointed and specific for such a title. This page in it's current incarnation could very easily be nominated at Articles For Deletion. That is perhaps the correct course of action, I don't see how it's not a rather broad ] and it should probably be completely transformed into a general portal (although one for <s>Marxism</s>Socialism already exists), or (and this appears more likely) completely pruned. ] (]) 19:12, 23 January 2021 (UTC)


<div class="floatleft" style="margin-bottom:0">]</div>''']''' has an RfC for possible consensus. A discussion is taking place. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments on the ''']'''.<!-- Template:Rfc notice--> Thank you. ] (]) 11:24, 11 November 2024 (UTC)
: I am not sure what the creator's intent was, but the curren t version of this article is not about "Cultural Marxism" and is sourced with material about Gramscian Marxism, the Birmingham School, the Frankfurt school, and Marxist Humanism insofar as those have contributes to the article's topic, Marxist cultural analysis. To my knowledge, the reliable sources on this topic do not typically include Bolshevik or Constructivist or Stalinist or Situationist or Maoist approaches to culture, although these are all valid topics and could be construed as potentially in scope as Marxist analyses. But this article follows the approaches taken, since the "cultural turn" of the 1930s to 1960s, by the main line of secondary sources AFAICT. ] (]) 19:44, 23 January 2021 (UTC)
::...and there in lays the problem, because Bolsheviks, Constructivists, Stalinists, Situationalists, and Maoists have all participated in Marxist Cultural Analysis too. So if that's the topic they should be included. Likewise, if the topic is actually '''Western''' Marxist Cultural Analysis, then it should be merged into Western Marxism (which already lists the Frankfurt School as its prominent thinkers). So none of the content here seems apropo. It's content looking for a page, rather than a page looking for content IMHO. ] (]) 03:02, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
::: Well, I for one would not recommend that, first, because the Western Marxism article is terrible (I had actually forgotten how bad it was until reviewing it just now) and second, because the scope of the two articles is necessarily different. This article follows the literature on which it is based in excluding the Marxisms developed in Communist states, but follows the same literature in emphasizing the Birmingham School and other humanist Marxists that are not notably related to Korsch and Lucacs-inspired "Western Marxism". So this article includes tendencies that Western Marxism does not, and perhaps more fundamentally, it excludes most of what Western Marxism actually features: on one hand, the political parties of Western Europe, and their intellectuals, and on another that huge body of Western Marxist intellectual work that was concerned with such themes as epistemology, philosophy of history, material history, political organization, technology, labour and urbanism - rather than cultural analysis, which is after all a fairly narrow field. So Marxist cultural analysis differs from Western Marxism through both inclusion and exclusion - which should not be surprising since it is a different topic altogether, even if certain figures or groups are held in common. ] (]) 03:51, 24 January 2021 (UTC)
::::I included material in fields with which I am more familiar. There are presumably other fields of thought, beyond the western schools quoted. There is certainly room for expansion by those with a knowledge of other schools of thought. The basic field of Marxism (with which I disagree, incidentally) has many outgrowths of analytical theory in economics, politics, culture, sociology, history etc, and all deserve articles, as do opposing theories. ] (]) 13:10, 4 March 2021 (UTC)


== No, it is NOT academic to label The Frankfurt School as Marxists. ==
== Are these authors within the scope of this article? ==


I'm porting my sources over from the AfD ] because I'm sick of people saying there's no academic backing for my viewpoint. That viewpoint being that whilst Critical Theory originated from Marxist principles, it is not its self a Marxist philosophy. That's why it's called Critical Theory - because it represented a BREAK from Marxist and even Neo-Marxist approaches:
Dang Shengyuan, who is Chinese and seems to be writing about the "Cultural Turn" period within the New Left: - and Douglas Keller who also discusses these things: . I'm asking because I'm not sure, but it would be interesting to include a Chinese perspective. ] (]) 11:57, 9 August 2021 (UTC)
: Kellner I can speak to: he is not a significant contributor in this field. As far as Shengyuan, is their work discussed in other sources? If not, it would not be ] to include. ] (]) 12:14, 9 August 2021 (UTC)
::Hmmm, according to the ] page, he's ''the George Kneller Chair in the Philosophy of Education in the Graduate School of Education and Information Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles'', but yeah, he seems to have focused on critical media literacy, although the page does state that he ''acted as editor of "Collected Papers of Herbert Marcuse," which collected six volumes of the papers of the critical theorist Herbert Marcuse.'' - so you're right, he's a bit too far off topic.
::Dang Shengyuan is an academic of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, whilst they've collaborated on numerous papers, they don't seem to be commented on that often, or have any major distinct theories that can be encapsulated on this page. Or at least, not that I can see through the language barrier. So perhaps undue for now. ] (]) 16:17, 14 August 2021 (UTC)
::: Agreed. ] (]) 16:21, 14 August 2021 (UTC)


* - ''"Hoggart’s political viewpoints were not outwardly expressed until much later in life, '''and make clear his aversion to Marxism"'''''
Hey, found these sources , many of which are on Jstor, so appear to have legitimacy. I'm particularly interested in the John Brenkman source . I'm aware that this page is specifically for the conspiracy theory aspects of the term "Cultural marxism" but that John Brenkman source seems to be the source for much of the salted content. Is it time to ask the question again? Should any of this appear on the current page? ] (]) 16:54, 14 August 2021 (UTC)
* - '''''"The final break with orthodox Marxism occurred with the Frankfurt School’s''' coming to condemn the Soviet Union as a politically oppressive system. Politically the Frankfurt School sought to position itself equidistant from both Soviet socialism and liberal capitalism"''
* - ''"This is Habermas' basic judgment on Marx: '''Marx's praxis philosophy is still a kind of subjective philosophy,''' while behind the concept of “labor” in praxis philosophy is still a single rationality: cognitive-instrumental rationality."'' (hence why we don't say Habermas is a Marxist on his page - because he wasn't.)
* - A whole article about The Frankfurt School's anti-communism, and their involvement with the CIA (even listing the small amount of work Horkhiemer did for the ]).
* - ''"Phil Slater traces the extent, and ultimate limits, of the Frankfurt School's professed relation to the Marxian critique of political economy... ...He shows that, in particular, the analysis of psychic and cultural manipulation was central to the young rebels' theoretical armour, but that even here, '''the lack of economic class analysis''' seriously restricts the critical edge of the Frankfurt School's theory."''
* - ''"'''Nothing intrinsicaly Marxist, that is to say, defines "cultural Marxism,"''' save for the evocation or hope of a postbourgeois society... ...The mistake of those who see one position sequeing into another is to confuse contents with personalities."''
* - ''"The Frankfurt School, '''known more appropriately as Critical Theory"'''''
* - ''"As Daniel Morley explains, '''these were the pseudo-Marxist ideas of the so-called Frankfurt School'''... ...Their lives are spent in the ivory towers of academia, churning out '''anti-Marxist''' verbiage."''
* - ''"There are two distinct periods in the work of the Frankfurt school....The second period is that of the postwar years, in which there was a social consensus that was formed under the umbrella of the cold war and rising prosperity (what the French call Les Trente Glorieuses) and '''in which it was declared that class and class struggle had come to an end.''' Frankfurt school theories about commodification, alienation, reification and false consciousness were revived by the 1968 movement as a way of explaining away the apparent passivity of the working class. Indeed, it was during this period that the working class began to be seen as part of the problem rather than the solution. The forward march of labour was halted, social democratic and communist parties accommodated to the new consensus and, as the philosopher André Gorz had it, it was "farewell to the working class"."''
* - ''"A considerable part of the leading German intelligentsia, including Adorno, have taken up residence in the ‘Grand Hotel Abyss’ which I described in connection with my critique of Schopenhauer as ‘a beautiful hotel, equipped with every comfort, on the edge of an abyss, of nothingness, of absurdity. And the daily contemplation of the abyss between excellent meals or artistic entertainments, can only heighten the enjoyment of the subtle comforts offered.’ (The fact that Ernst Bloch continued undeterred to cling to his synthesis of ‘left’ ethics and ‘right’ epistemology (e.g. cf. Frankfurt 1961) does honour to his strength of character but cannot modify the outdated nature of his theoretical position. To the extent that an authentic, fruitful and progressive opposition is really stirring in the Western world (including the Federal Republic), this opposition no longer has anything to do with the coupling of ‘left’ ethics with ‘right’ epistemology.)"''
* - ''"As is reasonably well known, the early years after the Institute’s founding seem an anomalous period in retrospect. Gerlach’s untimely death in October 1922 led to the appointment of Carl Grünberg as the Institute’s first director. He ensured that the Institute’s Marxism would assume a fairly orthodox cast. Martin Jay, citing a letter from a student at the Institute during the mid-twenties, characterizes it as ‘unimaginative’, suggesting that the student’s attitudes would ‘be shared by the Institute’s later leaders, who were to comprise the Frankfurt School. . . ’.footnote8 However that may be, the research carried on prior to Horkheimer’s directorship '''scarcely corresponds to the School’s conventional image. "'''


So no there's not some lack of sources on this. It's not some aberration or unsourced claim to say The Frankfurt School and other strains of Critical Theory (such as The Birmingham School) weren't Marxist in their mode of analysis. They were breaking from Marxism. They're Sociologists, NOT political ideologists (the same can be said for The Birmingham School).
*'''No''' - I don't see any there, there. All of the RS listed seem to be referring to ], rather than providing support for the {{tq|salted content}}, that is, the claims on which the conspiracy theory bases itself. Does anyone else see something different in this "collection of evidence"? It looks basically like a google search result for the phrase "cultural Marxism", to me. ] (]) 17:14, 14 August 2021 (UTC)


To put them back there, and re-label them as Marxists, IS the position that lacks sources. Ergo - they don't belong on this page as it is currently titled. It's not some absurd claim to say they weren't Marxists (even if they started out with Marxist principles as a key influence/guide, that doesn't warrant putting them under such a heading). The real absurd and unsourced action here, is filing them next to Trotsky as fellow Marxists, or trimming the amount of mentions of people from these schools if they're not Marxist enough to fit in with the current page title. That's absurd. ] (]) 10:09, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
:I think this has been accidentally posted on the wrong talk page. It should go to ] talk page like NewImpartial said above. ] (]) 17:34, 14 August 2021 (UTC)


:This looks a lot like the ] approach I have seen so many times on this page - the sources also do not support the claim of the section title ("it is NOT academic to label The Frankfurt School as Marxists") nor so they support the conclusion ("not Marxist enough to fit in with the current page title").
== Misrepresented sources ==
:Many of these sources say nothing whatsoever about whether Frankfurt School thinkers were Marxists, and the ones that do are overwhelmingly sectarian tracts rather than peer-reviewed scholarly sources.
:As far as "Critical Theory" is concerned, (1) this isn't used as a synonym for the Frankfurt School in its first generation, and (2) this article doesn't claim all of Critical Theory as Marxist cultural analysis. So I'm not seeing any there, there. ] (]) 15:56, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
::So when you said we follow the sources - you meant only when it's convenient for you. I wonder why you think they were called Critical Theorists if they were in fact just Marxists.
::''"not Marxist enough to fit in with the current page title"'' was in reference to Hoggart's mention being "trimmed" from The Birmingham School because sources (that you're now saying aren't valid because there's too many) state his aversion to Marxism. Sounds like you're conflicted on when a source counts and when it doesn't. So when there's not enough of them, there's not enough of them, and when there's too many of them it's the ], rather than a widely accepted viewpoint. Again I ask: Where are your sources saying they're Marxists? You've presented ZERO sources, I've apparently presented too many, from too a wide array of people. What a hypocrisy.
::Like there's a reason Peter Thompson (director of the Centre for Ernst Bloch Studies at the University of Sheffield), The New Left Review, Lukács, The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, and two academics (eg. the sources that aren't "Sectarian") are agreeing with the three that perhaps could be described that way (Marxist.com, thephilosophicalsalon.com, and historian Paul Gottfried)... it's because it's a widely held viewpoint. I don't see how including 3 authors from outside the left/academia, suddenly invalidates that, or makes it a Gish Gallop. It doesn't. You just don't like that it's a widely held viewpoint across multiple different perspectives (most of whom are left wing academic sources). What you're really saying is ]. Again, all of this is in defense of a poorly titled page. ] (]) 20:05, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
:::'''This is where the debate currently sits. 8 reliable sources (eg. The director of the Centre for Ernst Bloch Studies at the University of Sheffield. The New Left Review. Regular peer reviews/edited academics and authors). 3 less reliable sources (Marxist.com, Thephilosophicalsalon.com, Paul Gottfried). BOTH groups of sources all express general agreement.''' ] (]) 04:35, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
::::You are misconstruing most of these sources - the {{tq|viewpoint}} you are attributing to them is at best a mistake. None of the higher-quality sources you've cited actually present the Franfurt School as non-Marxist. ] (]) 11:28, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::'''''' most definately says Hoggart had an aversion to Marxism.
:::::Progressives using Marxist frameworks for social aims, but they don't push for anything particularly Marxist. They critique Capitalism as per '''''''s statement on their positioning themselves equidistant between the two systems.
:::::'''''' says correctly that ] wasn't particularly Marxist. Hence us not calling him a Marxist on his Misplaced Pages article.
:::::<s>''''''' I can understand dismissing.</s>
:::::'''''' does explicitly note their lack of economic class analysis, because they're Sociologists, not Ideologues or Marxist political theorists (as I've been saying). '''Source 9''' (which is from an expert on them) concurs with this view. So these two quality sources are backing each other up.
:::::<s>'''''' I can understand dismissing.</s>
:::::'''''' is an encyclopedic reference which correctly positions them - unlike our article.
:::::<s>'''''' I can understand dismissing.</s>
:::::'''''' already mentioned above, but again, Direct of the Ernst Bloch society is a very relevant field.
:::::<s>'''''' whilst is ] and a well known criticism, so I can understand dismissing.</s>
:::::'''''' is a very credible source. The Frankfurt School veering well away from Marxism (particularly under Horkhiemer) is a well known part of their history.
:::::Making those cuts, that's still 6 ] sources, which are definitely saying what I'm claiming they're saying. It's there in black an white. I find Source 9 '''PARTICULARLY condemning''' of the current page because it's from a very credible expert, and it's stating a well known fact about The Frankfurt School's post WW2 turn away from Marxism. This is also discussed in sources 2, 11, and 5.
:::::So to claim these well known turns didn't occur within The Frankfurt School - leading them from being essentially a study group of Marx, through being Marxian Sociologists, to being so far removed from that (in the post-WW2 period) that they became "Critical Theorists" with, as multiple sources note, a separation from Class Politics and what's understood as a Marxist politics. This is just how they evolved. This is the history of The Frankfurt School - whose main notability to English Speakers - IS their post-WW2 phase!
:::::You can deny it in short form terse responses (without any sources of your own).... but that doesn't stop it being there in black and white. I'm merely here to make sure your hypocrisy in passing The Frankfurt School off as Marxists, is noted for the record. ] (]) 13:56, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::That is a good first purge of the sources the IP presented originally, but let's look at the ones that remain:
::::::* source 1 presents Hoggart as anti-Marxist, so editors have removed him from this article.
::::::* source 2 says nothing about Adorno being anti-Marxist, but presents an opposition to "orthodox Marxism". The key word there being "orthodox".
::::::* source 3 says nothing about Habermas being opposed to Marxism; it presents Habermas's interptetation and critique of Marx.
::::::* source 5 is a reprint of a 1977 publication; I don't see anything in it arguing that the Frankfurt School isn't Marxist.
::::::* source 7, once again, presents Frankfurt School theorists in opposition to "orthodox Marxism", not as anti-Marxist.
::::::* source 9 doesn't present any opinion that I can see on whether the Frankfurt School was or wasn't Marxist.
::::::* source 11 doesn't identify the Frankfurt School as non-Marxist or anti-Marxist, though it does have something to say about the opposition between these scholars and Soviet Communism.
::::::So from this review, I am counting ''zero'' sources treating the Frankfurt School as external to or opposed to Marxism. In their conclusion above, the IP has also thrown in {{tq|Class Politics and what's understood as a Marxist politics}} as though those phrases included an operational definition of what counts as "Marxist" - but, ever since Marx's "I am not a Marxist", the actual use of the term has been more nuanced than that. The sources this article uses clearly treat most Frankfurt and Birmingham School writers as participating in Marxist traditions. ] (]) 13:56, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::{{tq|source 1 presents Hoggart as anti-Marxist, so editors have removed him from this article.}}
:::::::Yes, you've decided to remove one of the two founding members of The Birmingham School, because their views are inconvenient to your argument. This is ] and shows you're not here to ] and accurate encyclopedia.
:::::::{{tq|source 2 says nothing about Adorno being anti-Marxist, but presents an opposition to "orthodox Marxism". The key word there being "orthodox".}}
:::::::Orthodox Marxism is generally what Marxism means. When you say someone was a Marxist, or doing something Marxist, it generally refers to Orthodox Marxism, rather than Neo-Marxism, or Post-Marxism.
:::::::{{tq|source 3 says nothing about Habermas being opposed to Marxism; it presents Habermas's interptetation and critique of Marx.}}
:::::::A critique, is somewhat of an opposing statement. But again, I didn't say he was OPPOSED to Marxism, I said: he wasn't a Marxist.
:::::::{{tq|source 5 is a reprint of a 1977 publication; I don't see anything in it arguing that the Frankfurt School isn't Marxist.}}
:::::::That's why I bolded it for you. It says they had a '''"lack of economic class analysis"''' - which is generally consider core to Marxism, and being a Marxist. Which is what the page's title is suggesting they were, which is why I have an issue with the title.
:::::::{{tq|source 7, once again, presents Frankfurt School theorists in opposition to "orthodox Marxism", not as anti-Marxist.}}
:::::::I never said they were anti-Marxists, I said they weren't Political Marxists as the page title suggests. Source 7 is use to note that they're more appropriately called Critical Theorists, which is a step away from Marxism.
:::::::{{tq|source 9 doesn't present any opinion that I can see on whether the Frankfurt School was or wasn't Marxist.}}
:::::::It says they dropped working class politics? Which again, is a pretty core aspect of the philosophy known as Marxism. Sorry I feel like I'm taking crazy pills here - we're both talking about Marxism right? You do know, what that is correct? It's just between you saying, it doesn't involve economic class politics, and now saying it doesn't involve working class politics.... it just seems like you're ignoring the fundamental tenants of what Marxism is - in order to present some idea that anything can be Marxist? (except Hoggart)... so I really don't know what you think qualifies. Perhaps you're leaning towards Which I'd suggest, is more post-modern than Marxist.
:::::::{{tq|source 11 doesn't identify the Frankfurt School as non-Marxist or anti-Marxist, though it does have something to say about the opposition between these scholars and Soviet Communism.}}
:::::::It's about them veering away from conventional Marxism.
:::::::Anyways, it seems you have your own personal and very unorthodox understanding of what the word Marxism means. You've not offered to change the page to Neo-Marxist cultural analysis for instance. So yeah, your definition of "Marxism" (just that single word) doesn't seem to correspond to any sources, other than your own personal ] opinion. When you remove class politics, and economic politics, and working class politics from having any relation to the word - you're steadily approaching absurdism. Which would explain attempting to erase Hoggart from The Birmingham School. It's all just a bit ridiculous don't you think?
:::::::I certainly wouldn't characterize it as reasonable. I'd suggest you maybe even take a step back and think about some of what I've said above. ] (]) 06:26, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::I don't have my own {{tq|personal and very unorthodox understanding of what the word Marxism means}} - to define it I would start, for example, with what ] means by the term.
::::::::You are the one bringing in ''a priori'' assumptions (seemingly from an undergraduate course in Sociology), assumptions that don't apply to the topic of this article. If you don't understand what ] means, read Kolakowsli - that really isn't a me problem. If you think {{tq|Neo-Marxism}} isn't Marxism, read ] - again, not a me problem. If you think Marxism has to involve {{tq|working class politics}}, then there are many Marxisms that you don't understand, and that is once again not a me problem. If you think Marxism has to rely on {{tq|economic class analysis}} then, depending on what is meant by "economic", you may just have excluded Gramsci from Marxism - again, not a me problem. If you think Marxism can be equated with {{tq|conventional Marxism}} then you don't understand what this literature is trying to say - really not a me problem.
::::::::To put it simply, IP, you have assembled a list of sources that don't exclude these various figures and schools from Marxism - the sources don't say these aren't Marxists - and you then interptet the sources as supporting your "personal understanding" that they aren't Marxists, because of your own priors. On Misplaced Pages we call that kind of mental operation ], and we aren't allowed to do that.
::::::::As far as {{tq|you're not here to WP:BUILD and accurate encyclopedia}} (sic.) - That's an unsubstantiated ] and personal attack - don't do that. This isn't the article on ] - if the sources shown that one thread of that school is influenced primarily by Marx and Gramsci and another thread isn't, then one thread belongs in this article and the other does not. That isn't revisionism; it's simple plain-eyed vision, based on sources. ] (]) 12:45, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::{{tq|because of your own priors}} mother fucker, you don't know jack shit about my priors. ] (]) 10:35, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::But yes, obviously Marxism gets called something else when it has less of a focus on economics, class, and the defense of the working class. Which is exactly why we have terms like Neo-Marxism and Post-Marxism (which are more accurately describe the current theorists listed on the page).
:::::::::Which as I've said to you repeatedly, is the very reason why The Frankfurt School theorists became known as Critical Theorists, rather than Marxists.
:::::::::Your lack of basic comprehension is the issue here. I've provided sources in line with what I'm saying. You have not. I've suggest a mid-way compromise (Neo-Marxist cultural analysis) you have ignored this.
:::::::::This is not a me problem. It's a YOU problem, and YOUR failure to ], and to make assumptions about me instead. End of story. ] (]) 11:01, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::: The IP's lack of civility is certainly a them problem, and is verging on becoming disruptive IMO.
:::::::::: IP, you seem to believe that neo-Marxism isn't a kind of Marxism. No sources presented here support this. The sources you've provided are ''only'' {{tq|in line with}} what you're saying if the reader assumes what you assume, e.g., that "Marxist" refers to a politics and not social theory, that "neo-Marxist" and "Marxist" are mutually exclusive, etc. The RS you've cited here don't actually do any of this work for you. When we have a choice between what sources actually say and what editors fervently believe, we have to follow the sources. ] (]) 11:19, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::Yes, another editor has already noted the "abusive" tone of the IP. The only reason I haven't said anything myself is because I'm involved and because accusations of incivility are expressly discouraged by the civility policy itself.
:::::::::::This is also count three of editors (you and me) explicitly expressing concerns about unnecessary disruption. This is the point at which admins seriously consider blocks/bans without additional notice.
:::::::::::If anyone wants to involve another party, I would support that. My suggestion, however, would be that we both just walk away. If the IP takes this as license to sabotage the article, that will be very easy to correct. (If they change tune, however, and are willing to make improvements without revising the basic topic of the article that would of course be most welcome. Editing Misplaced Pages is not an all-or-nothing endeavor.)
:::::::::::Oh, and IP, you might want to consider striking the comment addressing another editor as a "mother fucker". It really makes you look bad.
:::::::::::Cheers, ] (]) 14:42, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:Scholars who take "Marxist principles as a key influence/guide" are generally described by the adjective "Marxist". This doesn't by itself align them with an particular political platform if that is your concern. There's plenty of room for internal diversity. ] (]) 16:23, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
::Not in Sociology, the term would at best be "Marxian" - and only in reference to ideas that are explicitly stated as Marxist. They're usually just called Sociologists, or as sources above note: Critical Theorists. ] (]) 19:17, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
:::This is a nonsense argument. In mainstream scholarship, "Marxian" and "Marxisant" are strains of "Marxist", not mutually exclusive categories. And "Critical Theorist" was applied to the Frankfurt School as a retronym, not as a result of them being "not Marxist enough".
:::As far as your list of sources goes, IP, the only quality sources you listed are ''nuancing'' the relationship between various later thinkers and prior Marxisms, not creating a mutual opposition. The only ones doing that are the poor/sectarian sources.
:::To be clear, not all Critical Theorists are Marxist, and not all Cultural Studies scholars are Marxist. But the first generation of the Frankfurt School and the golden generation of the Birmingham School definitely are - according to the sources. And so are the Marxist Humanists that you so conveniently ignore. ] (]) 20:11, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
::::{{tq|This is a nonsense argument. In mainstream scholarship, "Marxian" and "Marxisant" are strains of "Marxist"}}
::::In mainstream POLITICAL sources, YES. In mainstream SOCIOLOGY sources, NO. Because Marx's politics is considered divorced from his Sociology (a discipline he was one of the 5 founders of, Comte, Marx, Spencer, Weber, Durkheim). Because as I've said above, Sociology, is not a politics. ] (]) 20:28, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::This distinction between Marx's Politics and Sociology seems tangential to this article, which is about the analysis of culture. Also, the mental operation on behalf of the disciplinary organization of knowledge that vivisects Marx and places part of his brain into a "sociologist" jar, stacked alongside the similar-sized jars for Weber and Durkheim - well, fortunately, that isn't an approach followed by the sources used in this article (or reliable recent sources in general IMO). ] (]) 14:01, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::{{tq|This distinction between Marx's Politics and Sociology seems tangential to this article, which is about the analysis of culture.}}
::::::No it's not, Marx didn't spend a lot of time on the analysis of culture (beyond defining base and super structure) so once again, you're attempting to put your claims that "Marxist" is the best summation of the theorists listed is placed on a completely false argument.
::::::Of course SOCIOLOGY is relevant to the page when most of the authors listed were SOCIOLOGISTS, and at best NEO-MARXISTS. Your persistent demand they be described as "MARXISTS" is based on JACK SHIT. You've provided NOTHING to say the current title is the best description, other than your own want to control (]) the page, and gatekeep what happens here - all without presenting any sources, or doing any sort of encouragement of a ] approach. ] (]) 11:05, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Oh! I didn't know that—and I bet a lot of readers don't either. Do you have a source so we could add it to the article? In the humanities, the Frankfurt School (or at least the first generation) are consistently termed "Marxists". If the social sciences employ a different vocabulary, that would be nice to include. ] (]) 20:14, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
::::Not really, as it's more just understood within Sociology. There's this - but it's not specific to The Frankfurt School's sociology in particular. ] (]) 20:31, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::I think what I'm picking up on , is just the general vibe that isms, and ists, are political... whereas ians (eg. Wikiped'''ians''') are attempts at being apolitical or located more in theory that ideology. ] (]) 20:46, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::What about something from ] and its sources? Addressing any disciplinary issues in the article seems like a better solution than trying to decide here who does or does not really count as Marxist. ] (]) 21:55, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::{{tq|seems like a better solution than trying to decide here who does or does not really count as Marxist.}} I would go one step further, and suggest - maybe we shouldn't be fabricating a category here at all. Maybe we should just call them Critical Theorists, like the rest of academia does. ] (]) 04:36, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::Using the term "Critical Theorist" wouldn't be going "further". It would be replacing "Marxist" with a separate, but overlapping, category to which the Frankfurt School also belongs. It's not clear to me how this would be helpful. Some critical theorists, such as Foucault, were not Marxists.
::::::::I'll say again that I'd be happy to see you build out the coverage of Gramsci or to add material on the specifically sociological terminology and its significance.
::::::::Otherwise, I'm concerned that this conversation has veered too far away from how to improve the article. ] (]) 21:24, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::Foucault wasn't a Critical Theorist, he's a post modernist (he notes on page 119 of that he hadn't found The Frankfurt School until late in life).
:::::::::In the most genuine sense, only the first generation of The Frankfurt School are Critical Theorists, that's then stemmed out a bit further to the second and third generations (which is why people like Habermas and Nancy Fraser also adopt the term) - people outside of that are "choosing" to call themselves that rather than having a necessary connection to the school of thought.
:::::::::I'm trying to improve the article because I don't think the writers/thinkers listed (with the exception of Gramsci) are particularly focused on Marxism. Nor do I think there's a reasonable justification for turning this page into a ] for Marxist theorists - which is obviously something that is going to happen if the current name is retained. It's called custodianship. If you don't get the categories correct, you face ] issues down the line. This is part of being here to ] and encyclopedia, rather than using Misplaced Pages to do whatever we like. As @NewImpartial has said elsewhere, we have to follow the sources. ] (]) 01:53, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Your essentialist definitions are at odds with massive amounts of scholarship in the humanities.
::::::::::If they represent mainstream sociological practice (or really anything non-fringe), please add a section to that effect. It would be a space within the article where you could make many of the points you've made on this talk page.
::::::::::Otherwise, arguing at length against acknowledged consensus to change the established topic of the article is simply disruptive. It wastes the time of other editors and does not contribute to building a better encyclopedia. Thank-you for not edit warring, but this is still not cool.
::::::::::I'm going to give Newimpartial a barnstar for their patience in actually going through, and responding individually, to way more sources than would ever be necessary to establish basic facts (and not for the first time). ] (]) 17:44, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::{{tq|Your essentialist definitions are at odds with massive amounts of scholarship in the humanities.}} No the scholarship (as I've provided with sources above) says they weren't Political Marxists.
:::::::::::There's a fundamental difference between you and NewImpartial saying that "we've addressed all that" or "the scholarship disagrees" - and what backs my argument; which is a wide range of reliable sources, ranging from peer reviewed journal articles, to books, to The Director of the Ernst Bloch Institute, to The New Left Review. All of which are very credible, all of which say specific things (which I'm quoting) stating their turn away from Marxism.
:::::::::::Also, I don't care who you give out Barnstars/Goldstars to. I don't care about your special relationship, you don't have to tell me you're doing these things. ] (]) 06:04, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::To get a sense of what figures and what ideas are generally considered Marxist, I suggest conferring with even just a few TOCs of any general introductions or anthologies of the history of Marxist thought.
::::::::::::If your views are representative of any more broadly held in sociology, please by all means do add this to the article. It would also be fine to qualify the Marxism of the various figures presented here. They don't all agree about everything, and there is room for additional nuance.
::::::::::::We are not, however, going to purge the article everyone who flunks your arbitrary purity test, which so far appears to be complete OR.
::::::::::::Otherwise, once again, you are simply being disruptive, and I would ask you to please stop. ] (]) 15:29, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::No, providing sources is not arbitrary... and no, tables of contents, aren't a good measure of anything. ] (]) 10:36, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::If you aren't content looking at inclusion in anthologies, I have already suggested which monograph authors you ought to read, to understand the topic. ] (]) 11:07, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::Sorry you've mistakenly assumed the authority to give out reading assignments as if that's the issue. The issue is that the title isn't appropriate for the content (for the specific and current list of authors), and there are better options (and I've presented sources to that end). You'll have dream of being a lecturer or running your own book club elsewhere using some other ]. ] (]) 11:30, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::They kinda' are, actually—although of course it would be much better to actually go on and read the books (or at least the relevant sections).
::::::::::::::Kołakowski, for instance, is great, but it's also over a thousand pages...
::::::::::::::Also, I think at this point you may want to review ]. ] (]) 13:08, 19 November 2024 (UTC)


The lede ends {{Blockquote|text=However since the 1990s, this term has largely referred to the ], a highly influential discourse on the ] without any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis.<ref>Jamin, Jérôme. "Cultural Marxism: A Survey." Religion Compass 12, no. 1-2 (2018): e12258.</ref><ref>Jamin, Jérôme. "Cultural marxism and the radical right." In The post-war Anglo-American far right: A special relationship of hate, pp. 84-103. Palgrave Pivot, London, 2014.</ref>}}
I have examined the sources given and can emphatically say that the claims fail verification. Jérôme identifies the origins of the conspiracy theory in concrete citations to actual works of Gramsci and the Frankfurt School. The right-wing commentators ascribe more malice and more influence to those authors as matters of interpretation, but largely agree with the mainstream on the facts. The most relevant parts from the conclusion of "Cultural Marxism: A Survey" for discussion:
{{Blockquote|text=Even if this led us to observe two different groups with a different attitude regarding what is the truth: the opening discussion also stressed elements of continuity between both sides, and stated it was not our goal to say where and when some authors cross the border from one side to the other, from what is supposed to be real and serious academic work and what is more about interpretation and speculation. This is important because, first, the power of conspiracy theories rest upon the use of some unquestionable facts (in “conspiracy thinking,” an unquestionable fact is something you can verify by yourself). And, second, because the case of “Cultural Marxism” as a conspiracy theory illustrates using an unquestionable fact and how this continuity works between both sides. When looking at the literature on Cultural Marxism as a piece of cultural studies, as a conspiracy described by Lind and its followers, and as arguments used by Buchanan, Breivik, and other actors within their own agendas, we see a common ground made of unquestionable facts in terms of who did what and where, and for how long at the Frankfurt School. Nowhere do we see divergence of opinion about who Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, and Herbert Marcuse really were, when they have met and in which universities.
But this changes if we look at descriptions of what they wanted to do: conducting research or changing deeply the culture of the West? Were they working for political science or were they engaging with a hidden political agenda? Were they working for the academic community or obeying foreign secret services?
And for the same reasons, interpretations change if we look at what they have done: did they succeed? What has been the real impact of their project? Can we locate this on campuses and academic discourses, or on culture in general? Such interpretations also change again if we look at what they knew of their own influence: were they really aware of what they were doing? Were they overtaken by the success of their works on their students and readers? Were they themselves manipulated by foreign forces? Scholars and conspiracy theories differ significantly in their assessments of such questions. These questions also show the connection between the two groups. All start with unquestionable facts, but to go on to make very different interpretation about the impact of Cultural Marxism on culture and values, with sometimes very strong suspicions about the shameful objective behind the story.}}
It is very clear from this that the current lede text cannot stand, but I'd welcome input on how exactly it should change.
] (]) 18:38, 15 December 2021 (UTC)


== Article topic and scope ==
:{{tq| Nowhere do we see divergence of opinion about who Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, and Herbert Marcuse really were, when they have met and in which universities. But this changes if we look at descriptions of what they wanted to do }} These are the trivial facts identified, that Lind knew who Horkheimer was… Thats not lead-worthy. Also i don’t see the connection to the cited passage from the lead. Do you have any suggestion on what you wish to improve? ] (]) 20:19, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
While the above discussion was about whether the ] can be described as Marxist, issues were also raised about the article's topic and scope.
:: It's uncontroversial that Cultural Marxism discourse is active in the far-right. The problematic wording is "without any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis". It would be closer to the truth to say without any clear distinction between what the far-right commenters are talking about and what the academics are talking about. There is disagreement on whether it is good or bad, but almost no disagreement on ''what it is''. Jérôme describes this dynamic better than any source I've seen to date, but even it is fairly cagey and vague when it comes to identifying what precisely is the point of departure. ] (]) 21:06, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
::: Sennalen, I encourage you to review previous discussions, such as and those that followed, and those at ], before wasting time arguing that Jamin has established a strong link between the Marxist cultural theorists and the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory. Thanks.
::: Also, re: {{tq|It would be closer to the truth to say without any clear distinction between what the far-right commenters are talking about and what the academics are talking about}} - that is unsourced, POV nonsense. Don't do that. ] (]) 21:11, 15 December 2021 (UTC)


In my understanding, members of the Frankfurt School said that while Marx had study economics under capitalism, they would study culture under capitalism. This became known as ] or ].
::: Sennalen, what you're claiming is completely inaccurate. --] (]) 08:45, 17 December 2021 (UTC)


How does this article differ in scope from cultural analysis?
:::: The linked conversation seems to be about the definition of "school of thought". If that argument is pertinent, please elaborate. Right now I am discussing sourced material, particularly to the block quote given above. The burden of proof is on the text in the article, which says the topics are "without any clear relationship". The source establishes to the contrary that there is a clear relationship, namely the work of the Frankfurt School. It implies there are differences, but declines to identify what those differences are. It's hard to say exactly how the article should summarize this, since the author is being so evasive. The current article text definitely isn't it. It wouldn't be ideal to pass over in silence, but that would be more honest than the status quo. ] (]) 21:36, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
::::: The User Talk page I linked above doesn't have much to do with the "School of Thought" issue. In the case of the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory Talk page, I linked the first of a series of discussions regarding the interpretation of Jamin. If you can't see how these discussions bear on your ] interpretation of your block quote, well, ]. ] (]) 21:40, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
:::::{{tq|The source establishes to the contrary that there is a clear relationship, namely the work of the Frankfurt School.}} No that's not true. What the source says (I quote again, since no one reacted to my first attempt at clarifying this): {{tq|Nowhere do we see divergence of opinion about who Max Horkheimer, Theodor Adorno, and Herbert Marcuse really were, when they have met and in which universities. But this changes if we look at descriptions of what they wanted to do}}. The "clear relationship" is that the conspiracy theorists pin their conspiracy on real people. Which is hardly worth a mention, and I don't know why Jerome dwells on that point... But regardless, the {{tq|without any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis}} is correct in that the conspiracy theorists completely misrepresent the ''content'' of what the Frankfurt School said and wanted. ] (]) 21:43, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
::::::What are the sources on how it is misrepresented? That's the key support that the article needs and Jamin isn't providing. ] (]) 22:19, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
{{od}} Erm, you quoted it: {{tq|Scholars and conspiracy theories differ significantly in their assessments of such questions.}} The implication being that the scholars are of course right, and the conspiracy theorists not. --] (]) 22:25, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
:::::::That's adequate to support the claim that differences exist. What those differences actually are are vague, and indeed, earlier in the conclusion Jamin says he is intentionally not defining what specific beliefs are academic or conspiratorial. The article should do better, and must do better if it is to retain the even stronger claim that there is no clear relationship. ] (]) 22:40, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
:::::::: The "no clear relationship" language emerged from one of the discussions I linked you to already. I am very reluctant to revisit all of this again just because a new editor posts to this Talk page. ] (]) 22:43, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
Senallen, sure, I’m happy to support a refinement for this sentence like “There’s no relationship to the Frankfurt school, other the fact that the conspiracy theorists picked the Frankfurt School”. What do you think? ] (]) 23:18, 15 December 2021 (UTC)
: It has to accurately represent the source. Jamin does not say "no relationship" or anything that could be glossed as such. He says that when the conspiracy theorists say "Cultural Marxism" the referents are the Frankfurt School, Gramsci, and a few miscellaneous Young Hegelians. The conspiracy theorists accurately identify these philosophers' major works and a general outline of their content. The conspiracy theoriests err in exaggerating the influence of Marxist cultural analysis and acribing malicious intent that's not supported by evidence. The sources from the Guardian and The Conversation tell a similar story, and I'm sure other concordant sources can be identified in short order. ] (]) 00:38, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
:: How would you characterize the relationship? Antisemitic caricature, maybe? "Unclear" seems to me to be a generous way of putting it, even based on Jamin (and other scholars, like Joan Braune, make stronger claims on this point, in case you are still refusing to read the previous discussions). ] (]) 01:22, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
::: The relationship is clearly hostile. Increasingly after 1991 "Cultural Marxism" has been a linguistic shibboleth indicating discourse from people who are hostile to the program of Marxist cultural analyis; however most of the sources identify the object of that hostility as the actual people and actual work of the Frankfurt School, Gramsci, and others in that milieu. Braune introduces a wrinkle by saying that the conspiracy theorists are actually commenting on something that doesn't exist at all. I know there are some sources that cite her for that, and maybe some others that make that claim independently. That's no cause for heartburn, though. The usual methods of ] apply. The way to go is probably 1. Report all significant viewpoints, and 2. Do not choose which one is "true". ] (]) 01:35, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
:::: Re: {{tq|most of the sources identify the object of that hostility as the actual people and actual work of the Frankfurt School, Gramsci, and others in that milieu}} - no reliable sources that I have seen actually do this. Jamin doesn't {{tq|identify the object of that hostility as the actual people and actual work of the Frankfurt school}}, and the occasional conspiracy theorist name-checking Horkheimer or Adorno doesn't make it so. This belief of yours that the "Culural Marxism" of the conspiracy theorists simply represents {{tq|discourse from people who are hostile to the program of Marxist cultural analysis}} - essentially, they know what Marxists are saying about culture but don't like it - lacks any RS support ''and is in fact a trope of the conspiracy theory''. Misplaced Pages does not create FALSEBALANCE, or present FRINGE views as "alternative facts" alongside actual scholarship. We owe our readers better. ] (]) 01:48, 16 December 2021 (UTC)


Part of the reason for this article was to explain the reality that was misrepresented in the cultural Marxism conspiracy theory. But the conspiracy theorists have a much larger group, including unrelated topics for example Rudy Dutschke, political correctness and identity politics. I wonder how much this article appears as a rebuttal.
:::: Try reading ]. There's no need to try to introduce ] sources, which seems to be your whole aim here. --] (]) 08:48, 17 December 2021 (UTC)


We should identify reliable sources for the scope of this article. ] (]) 18:38, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
{{od}} The idea that the idea that the conspiracy theorists understand what they read is part of the conspiracy theory is a curiously recursive theory, and I'd be interested if you have any sources for that. Meanwhile, here are a few of the sources connecting the conspiracy theories to actual Marxist cultural analysis. Since we've been discussing Jamin, we can start with some specific text there.
:*From ''Religion Compass''
:**"Many different levels exist between these two positions. It is not easy to say, and it is not the goal of this paper to say, where and when some authors cross the border even if within this dynamic, there is a real competition between scholars who study conspiracy theories and claim to produce a legitimate knowledge, and authors of conspiracy theories who do not trust the academic literature or believe it is necessary to go beyond. Next to this competition between Groups 1 and 2, since conspiracies exist, we will consider there is a continuity between both sides: the more one feels at ease with Group 1, one's analysis relies on facts and demonstrations to take into account some specific plots in some specific contexts;"
:**"In many ways, there are no major disagreements on the Frankfurt School between academic scholars such as historians and conspiracy theorists. Nevertheless, the competition between scholars who study conspiracy theories and claim to produce a legitimate knowledge, and authors of conspiracy theories who do not trust the academic literature, is not as clear in this specific case than it is with other examples"
:**"He called this “Political Correctness,” and immediately associates it with Cultural Marxism, that is to say what he calls “Marxism translated from economic into cultural terms” (Lind, 2004, p. 5). This was a transfer initially undertaken by the leaders of the Frankfurt School."
:**"Among the Marxist intellectuals, the most regularly cited as reflecting the membership of the School can be found in Raehn's (2004) chapter “The historical roots of ‘Political Correctness’.” In particular, this chapter, again taken from “Political Correctness: A Short History of an Ideology,” includes short biographies of Georg Lukacs, Antonio Gramsci, Wilhelm Reich, Erich Fromm, Herbert Marcuse, Theodor Adorno, and Max Horkheimer"
:**"When looking at the literature on Cultural Marxism as a piece of cultural studies, as a conspiracy described by Lind and its followers, and as arguments used by Buchanan, Breivik, and other actors within their own agendas, we see a common ground made of unquestionable facts in terms of who did what and where, and for how long at the Frankfurt School"
:**"The discordance appears at two important levels. First, in the interpretation of the true will of the School's leaders: “Did they really plan to do what they have done?” Second, on the consequences the School had on Western values in both Europe and the United States: “Is the destruction of Western values a reality?” Cultural Marxist conspiracy theorists and scholars of the Frankfurt School diverge in their interpretations of these types of questions."
:*Blackford in ''The Conversation'' reaches essentially the same conclusions more succinctly:
:**"Nonetheless, there is at least a minimal commonality between the work of Marxist scholars such as Schroyer and the theories of right-wing culture warriors. To some extent they were focusing on the same tendencies in Western Marxism. Thus, there is a grain of truth even in Breivik’s conspiracy theorizing, and I wonder whether this might explain the hostility to including an article on “cultural Marxism” in Misplaced Pages. The same scholarship that supports Schroyer’s analysis, for example, gives a degree of superficial credibility to the likes of Lind, Buchanan, or Breivik. Scholars such as Schroyer and Dennis Dworkin do not, however, suggest that the Frankfurt School or other “cultural Marxists” ever had a plan to destroy the moral fibre of Western civilization, or to use their critique of culture as a springboard to a totalitarian regime."
:*Wilson in ''The Guardian'' is more acidic, but still far from stating no connection - "The tale varies in the telling, but the theory of cultural Marxism is integral to the fantasy life of the contemporary right. It depends on a crazy-mirror history, which glancingly reflects things that really happened, only to distort them in the most bizarre ways."
:*The ''Al-Jazeera'' opinion column used in this article doesn't look like a quality source for these kinds of claims, but it says, "Like all good conspiracy theories, there’s some fact and some fiction in Lind’s account. The Frankfurt school of intellectuals (including Theodor Adorno, Herbert Marcuse, Erich Fromm and others) did immigrate to the United States. And they have definitely had an outsize influence on some parts of American academic culture. Where the conservatives get confused is the relationship between these Marxists and Democrats. Lind and his followers see one big group of commies; actual commies, on the other hand, see liberal capitalist use of diversity rhetoric as a co-optation of our line"
:*From Busbridge et al.
:**"One of the issues associated with the Cultural Marxist conspiracy is that Cultural Marxism is a distinct philosophical approach associated with some strands of the Frankfurt School, as well as ideas and influences emanating from the British New Left. However, proponents of the conspiracy do not regard Cultural Marxism as a form of left-wing cultural criticism, but instead as a calculated plan orche-strated by leftist intellectuals to destroy Western values, traditions and civilisation"
:**"we are exclusively concerned with the conspiratorial discourse of Cultural Marxism, not as a descriptive term referring to Euro-Marxism, although we note that advo-cates of the conspiracy theory conflate the two"
:*Finally in Braune, despite claiming that cultural Marxism ''does not exist'', it has no qualms in immediately following that by linking the phrase to the Frankfurt School. It does not go on to say the details are invented, rather exaggerated. It goes on to describe some ways that the conspiracy theorists engaged (however incorrectly) with the actual work.
:**"Although some members of the Frankfurt School had cultural influence—in particular, some books by Erich Fromm and Herbert Marcuse were influential on some activists on the New Left in the 1960s—“Cultural Marxism” conspiracy theories greatly exaggerate the Frankfurt School’s influence and power."
:**"Cultural Marxism is not just a conspiracy theory about the Frankfurt School as such, but a conspiracy theory that trades on the Frankfurt School’s perceived Jewishness"
:**"The Cultural Marxism conspiracy theorists are no exception to this lack of distinction-making. First, the ideas advanced by any individual member of the Frankfurt School are generally taken as representative of all members of the Institute; Marcuse’s views on tolerance, Adorno’s aesthetics, or Fromm’s psychoanalytic analysis of fascism cannot be universally attributed to “Critical Theory” as a whole"
:**"Although elements of the Frankfurt School were critical of Western culture and civilization — Horkheimer and Adorno’s Dialectic of Enlightenment and much of Adorno’s and Benjamin’s work in particular, contain poignant critiques of the Enlightenment—this is by no means representative of the whole of the Frankfurt School’s project"
:**"Herbert Marcuse’s essay on “repressive tolerance” is often cited as the source for the claim that Cultural Marxism is engaged in a “political correctness” project, and the essay is often misunderstood as an argument for state censorship or for social shaming of dissenters. In fact, the essay attempts to show that while United States society claims to be a beacon of freedom due to its practice of tolerance and absence of censorship, the U.S. capitalist state uses this very tolerance as a tool to reinforce its hegemony and to disempower the very kinds of brave, dissenting ideas that the liberal ideal of tolerance was originally intended to empower. The solution for Marcuse is not to make the U.S. state more repressive and censorious, but rather to refuse to obey the commands of a state that accommodates routine dissent"
:**"But to hear the conspiracy theorists tell it, Critical Theorists want to deny the working class access to culture and religion (specifically Christianity)—in reality, Critical Theory does challenge capitalism and intertwined unjust social structures such as the patriarchal family, but as a project, Critical Theory aims to liberate humanity, not destroy with abandon"
:**"In addition to the functions that the Cultural Marxism narrative serves for antisemites and the far-right, they are likely to resist the Frankfurt School’s influence because they understand, at least on an unconscious level, that the Frankfurt School does provide intellectual resources and an intellectual tradition capable of adequately challenging their ideas."
:**"The conspiracy theory not only misrepresents the Frankfurt School’s intellectual project—it also perpetuates centuries-old stereotypes that dehumanize Jews"


:I second this motion.
So we can see there is quite a lot of text available to describe how the conspiracy theorists relate to the sources. They often use them incorrectly and with anti-Semitic intent, but it should be undeniable that there is something real there they have engaged with. This is probably too much to process all at once into a better sentence for the lede, so I suggest we work bottom up, parsing out the particular claims and perspectives from different sources in the body. At a later time, those insights can be distilled into a concise lede statement. There is no deadline. ] (]) 16:26, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
:For my part, I have been understanding "Marxist" to include anyone standardly covered under that heading in introductory overview sources or academic histories. To me, this seems unimpeachable, and I don't understand why we're arguing about it.
:The scope of "cultural analysis", however, is less clear.
:I was introduced to much of the material covered in this article in undergrad courses in cultural studies, literary theory, and art criticism, and I have been orienting myself against this background. But we should be able to do better than this. I have no specific vision for the article and would welcome anything more precise. In particular, it would be nice to open the body of the article with a "Definition" section establishing scope explicitly on the basis of high-quality sources. Right now, it feels like editors (including myself) are somewhat adrift and too much just associating on the article title.
:One thing I suggest we eliminate at the onset is any reference to the supposed "original intention" motivating the creation of the article vis-à-vis that idiot conspiracy theory. This has no basis in Misplaced Pages policy or, to the best of my knowledge, any of the relevant scholarly literature. Absent support from high-quality overview sources, I would support removing that material from the article entirely. It's an entirely separate topic that already has its own article.
:Cheers, ] (]) 19:17, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
::The article's current lead section offers six citations for this sentence, {{tq|The tradition of Marxist cultural analysis has also been referred to as "cultural Marxism", and "Marxist cultural theory", in reference to Marxist ideas about culture.}} While that may represent an OVERCITE situation, I have no doubt that the sentence is accurate (as an "also referred to", though not as an "ever primarily referred to"). Some of these sources are of high quality. As a result, I believe the sentence in question meets the test of ].
::As far as the scope of this article in general is concerned, one convenient (albeit partial) account of the relevant thinkers and themes appears in (with which I have no affiliation or conflict of interest). ] (]) 20:41, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::Could those citations in the lead be distributed more discursively and, ideally, be attached to individual sentences or short paragraphs to produce a "Definition" section? I hope I'm not being too persnickety, but the lead is supposed to summarize the contents of the article, not stipulate them.
:::We could also use this section to define Marxism as it is related to this topic. It wouldn't have occurred to me that this would be necessary, but it's a fair demand that could be easily accommodated with the support of any of a great variety of sources.
:::Could you email me the article you link? I don't seem to be able to access it through the Misplaced Pages Library. It shows up in my search, but still appears as locked.
:::In any case, adopting a little more of a general "cultural studies" frame seems like a promising strategy, especially since we already have more specialized articles on ] and ] (however lame they currently are). ] (]) 21:19, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
::::Thanks for sending the article. I fully support its use as a base for the framing of this article. Although not familiar with the author, his CV is plenty impressive. What quibbles I have are not relevant in this context. The views expressed are, to the best of my knowledge, largely uncontroversial among experts in the field.
::::Is what you sent me what is freely available here? If so, I think we can probably just cite to that. It has a few grammatical and typographical errors, but nothing that interferes with meaning. ] (]) 20:58, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::To answer your question: yes, that's the version I sent. ] (]) 21:00, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
::Yeah, agreed we certainly don't want to be setting up articles to be debating with each other, although I don't think anyone is really trying to do that. Also, we have a ton of, let's say, "adjacent" articles to this one, like ]. I have no idea or opinion about whether or how they should be merged or reorganized.
::I'm sure we can find a bajillion sources that at least sorta link FS to "Marxism". e.g. our article on ] talks about his Marxist scholarship, etc.
::Maybe we should clarify that "Marxist" doesn't mean "stuff Marx said"? It's weird, but if the sources call it "Marxist" maybe that's the best we can do. We do have "sociological analysis and interpretation of the areas of social-relation that Marx '''did not discuss'''" (emph. mine), but maybe we could be more clear? Would that address the complaint? ] <small>(] &#124; ])</small> 20:47, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::We have at least one editor, operating under constantly shifting Australian IP addresses, who does argue with reference to the alleged intent of the article's creation (including somewhere above). Even in the event they go away, however, removing treatment of the conspiracy theory in this article might help to prevent others from raising this bogus issue.
:::Absent objections, I will do this myself on the grounds that it is a separate topic not covered by RS on the topic of this article.
:::Oh, and the massive amount of overlapping content on Misplaced Pages (or at least philosophy Misplaced Pages) drives me crazy as well. I've given up on any sort of general solution, however, just because of the vast amounts of time it would take to fix it—even assuming agreement among the editors involved. ] (]) 21:33, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
:::The references to the four sources for the existence of "Marxist cultural analysis" are unspecific. The fourth source for example merely says, "there are neo-Marxian models of cultural studies ranging from the Frankfurt School to Althusserian paradigms." (Douglas Kellner, "Cultural Studies and Social Theory: A Critical Intervention." That could be the scope of the article, but we should show that there are sources about it, rather than just sources referring to it.
:::Some editors, if I am correct, think the scope of the article should be anything that Marxists said about culture. That would be broader than the scope in Kellner. But to do that, we would need to show there was a body of literature about the topic, not just isolated articles about what different Marxists wrote about culture.
:::Also, we might consider treating the article as a "History of." ] (]) 15:09, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::::To be clear: the reason I pointed to the sentence with the six cites is because they document the use of "cultural Marxism" as a lesser synonym for the tradition of Marxist cultural analysis, not as the best evidence that the tradition exists or how it is defined.
::::For the latter, I would go with the many anthologies of Marxist writings about culture over the years, as well as such articles as the 2018 piece by Artz, which I linked above. ] (]) 15:42, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
::::I think that reorienting the topic of the article as an area of specialization in the interdisciplinary the field of Cultural Studies would be a good idea. Cultural Studies is something in which you can pursue a PhD—and actually attain a professorship when you're done with the degree. It's not clear to me that this is true of "Cultural Analysis".
::::Further, Marxism is a recognized AOS in the field (for non-academics, Area Of Specialization: the top line of your CV – you only get one area — and what appears on the department website). ] (]) 22:50, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::Here's a link to the full article that Newimpartial mentioned: Lee Artz, (2018). Can we use that as a source for guide for the scope of the article, per ]?
:::::We can also consider renaming the article, since the current title may be misleading. ] (]) 09:03, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::Yes, I support this. I would also support changing the title of the article to "Marxist cultural studies" if others also think that would be a minor improvement. Seriously do not want to argue about it though. ] (]) 16:38, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::What about "Marxism and cultural studies?" The scope could then be the relationship between Marxism/Marxists and the creation and development of cultural studies as described by writers such as Artz. ] (]) 20:27, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::That seems like the correct scope. What would be the advantage of that title? Most of our other articles follow the convention of "Marxist ". ] (]) 17:35, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::There is currently more variety than this in article titles: ] and ], but also ] and ]. ] (]) 18:31, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::Okay. "Marxist cultural studies" sounds more natural to me, but I don't have any principled objection to "Marxism and cultural studies" if others prefer it. ] (]) 18:40, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::Sorry to crop up again, but:
:::::::::::>''"Dennis Dworkin writes that "a critical moment" in '''the beginning of cultural studies as a field''' was when Richard Hoggart used the term in 1964 in founding the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS) at the University of Birmingham."'' ].
:::::::::::I don't know, but perhaps that's why ''"Marxism and cultural studies"'' was being suggested, because whilst the two relate that doesn't mean Marxism has a solid claim to having done cultural studies before it was a field. Making that claim by synthesizing a "Marxist cultural studies" that includes The Frankfurt School, would be ].
:::::::::::Some Marxist scholars may have been involved in pre-cursors to cultural studies, such as ], but that does not mean there was a ] going on (because the field didn't exist yet). Saying that would be traveling back in time (to before it was a field) and creating it before Hoggart et al. You're all running into the exact problem we had with cultural Marxism as a term to begin with. It was never defined because of what you're all facing now. It's at best "a bunch of ] that cropped up just before ] and ]". Which is a pretty loose idea for an article.
:::::::::::Cultural studies is critical of the social and economic frameworks culture is created within. But it is not innately Marxist as a field. ] (]) 23:53, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::If the title were "Marxism and cultural studies" that would clearly and naturally include pre-Birmingham work on clulture by Gramsci, Benjamin and the Frankfurt School, because (1) cultural studies is in the first instance the study of culture, not the name of a discipline; and (2) the historiography produced about Marxist approaches within the eventual discipline ''also'' typically begins with the generation of Gramsci and Lukacs, if not earlier. This field of discourse is neither limited to Freudo-Marxism (though I still prefer ] as a term) nor does it involve ] (or time travel) to define its boundaries. So regardless of the title chosen, the scope of the article will be following what the RS literature in the field actually says. ] (]) 00:28, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::I would push back against point (1) a bit because I think the existence of Marxism as a major tradition within the institutionally recognized discipline of cultural studies is part of what legitimizes this article as more than just a conjunction of terms.
:::::::::::::Point (2), however, is correct, and I would have thought it uncontroversial. But since it apparently is not, I have added material to the article directly supporting the Frankfurt School and Gramsci as part of cultural studies. ] (]) 18:50, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::Apparently you're incorrect @], as is the ] page, and Cultural Studies was actually started by one Karl "Satan" Marx (because he's behind everything)... and it started in 1859. Which I couldn't confirm was in the Lee Artz article.
:::::::::::::.....and apparently that section of the sighted source reads:
:::::::::::::<blockquote>''Marxism — The Collected Works of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels comprises some 50 volumes. Arguably, however, the most influential texts '''for cultural study''' have been the shortest: the three-page Theses on Feuerbach and the five-page 1859 Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (see BASE AND SUPERSTRUCTURE). Further important texts include''</blockquote>
:::::::::::::Particularly if the article is to be about '''Marxism and cultural studies''' - a field of academic discourse. Not just any application of Marxism to culture. But also; if we're saying Marxism doesn't have a definition - then doesn't that justify the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory? Because Marxism could be anything! Which is now something we're saying in Wikivoice, because of one single source? Seriously. This doesn't seem odd to anyone else? ] (]) 04:06, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::Does this contain a proposal to improve the article? If so, what are your proposing? ] (]) 11:05, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::Yes, the removal of the erroneous text from the page:
:::::::::::::::<blockquote>The most influential texts for cultural studies are (arguably) the "Thesis on Feuerbach" and the 1859 Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy.</blockquote>... as it's making a false claim about cultural studies, and using an obvious weasel word "arguably" to make this claim. ] (]) 10:20, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::Expert scholars and self-identified Marxists disagree about the definition of "Marxism". In no way, however, does it follow that anything goes. Please just edit the article to add whatever additional nuance you deem appropriate and we'll ] if necessary. ] (]) 18:30, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::It doesn't matter if experts disagree on the definition of Marxism. ] (]) 19:45, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::It matters in that it means that we Misplaced Pages editors should be not wasting one another's time trying to decide what is or is not authentically Marxist. According to HQRSs, the experts disagree. Were it not for the debate here, it would not have occurred to me to say this explicitly. For it is hardly unusual, especially for a political term. But if you think mention of the existence of internal divisions within Marxism does not belong in the article, please just take it out. ] (]) 20:50, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::I said elsewhere,"we could use Artz's article or similar ones to determine what exactly should be mentioned in the article and what should not...Making it about anything Marxist that remotely touches on culture is a violation of synthesis and weight." There is no reason whatsoever for us as editors to define Marxism,to know what it is or to determine who is or is not Marxist if we rely on sources about the influence of Marxism on cultural studies. ] (]) 21:29, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::::I’m not sure where we disagree then. Please by all means edit the article directly if my contributions appear misguided. ] (]) 23:52, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::::You think that defining Marxism presents a problem for this article. I disagree. ] (]) 14:18, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::::::::I interpret the IP editor as disputing the content (and title) of this article based on an ''a priori'' definition of "Marxist" that they happen to hold, which is external to the sources on this article's topic. I believe that you (TFD), Patrick and I all disagree with the various criticisms and proposals the IP editor has made based on their assumptions about "Marxism". I feel that our three positions are broadly in ageeement with each other, though we would doubtless each formulate our specific position using our own preferred language. ] (]) 18:05, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::::::::::I agree.
:::::::::::::::::::::Also, TFD, to clarify: I do not think the article should define Marxism except in the most general way. You can see my effort, sourced to HQRSs on the topic of the article, in the short section I added. I welcome improvements.
:::::::::::::::::::::It would also be appropriate in some cases to more narrowly classify some figures as particular types of Marxists (e.g., Hegelian, humanist, structuralist) in sections on those figures, but I do not think this article is the right place to go into such classificatory schemes in detail.
:::::::::::::::::::::Oh, and does anyone remember the markup to shift this thread back to the left with a little line and arrow? It has to be almost impossible to read on some screens. Or possibly (I hope!) we've exhausted the topic and at least provisionally arrived at an acceptable consensus? In that case, it wouldn't matter.
:::::::::::::::::::::Happy Thanksgiving to everyone reading from the U.S.!
:::::::::::::::::::::Cheers, ] (]) 19:02, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::Hi, would you mind answering the question I posed at ]? That is, "Have you ever edited Misplaced Pages with a user account? If so, would you mind sharing the username—or at least the reason(s) you no longer sign in to edit?" ] (]) 15:35, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
:::::::::::::Oh dear, the local stasi wants to see my papers. Sorry, you'll have to get a bigger Barnstar. ] (]) 09:05, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::::::::::On this page, a little over a month ago, you counseled another IP editor to get an account, and you did this from your IP address.
::::::::::::::It's clear you know what you're doing, and to me it appears to be a violation of ] and ]. If there is a reason for your practice other than to skirt the basic norms of accountability, civility, and collaboration, however, I want to be sure that you have the opportunity to share it.
::::::::::::::If you acknowledged the existence of a stable usertalk page, I would be posting this there. Feel free to respond on my talk page if that seems more appropriate. ] (]) 13:34, 1 December 2024 (UTC)


== Cultural Study vs Cultural Studies. ==
:I disagree, this isn't even the right article to do this. Rather, all that belongs to the conspiracy theory. And I'm really not sure any of this here goes beyond the fact that the conspiracy theorists just picked Adorno et al and tried to pin a bunch of crap on them. ] (]) 16:45, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
:: What follows is my much longer version of {{tq|the conspiracy theorists just picked Adorno et al and tried to pin a bunch of crap on them}}. :) ] (]) 17:06, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
: I still don't see how you can conclude from the RS you have quoted that {{tq|there is something real there they have engaged with}}. I will deal first with Busbridge et al., and Braune, because they represent the more substantial RS. Busbridge says that the conspiracy theorists regard Cultural Marxism {{tq|as a calculated plan orchestrated by leftist intellectuals to destroy Western values, traditions and civilisation}} and that they {{tq|conflate}} the Cultural Marxism of the conspiracy theory with Euro-Marxism. These authors are not saying that the conspiracy theorists {{tq|have engaged with}} {{tq|something real}}.
: Likewise, Braune's statement that {{tq|“Cultural Marxism” conspiracy theories greatly exaggerate the Frankfurt School’s influence and power"}}, and her reference to {{tq|a conspiracy theory that trades on the Frankfurt School’s perceived Jewishness}} does not imply "engagement" between the conspiracy theorists and a supposed "Cultural Marxism". Of course the Frankfurt School did actually exist, and of course the conspiracy theorists took certain ideas of Marcuse, Adorno and others, distorted them pretended that they represented a coherent political project and then applied the tropes of antisemitism to turn this (imaginary) political project into a conspiracy theory. That is what the reliable sources tell us happened, and it would be an act of total WHITEWASHING to treat that as "engagement" or "influence".
: Among the other authors you have cited, while Jamin is occasionally more sloppy than other scholars, he does generally maintain the distinction between the Frankfurt School, as an actual historical phenomenon subjected to antisemitic caricature by the conspiracy theorists, and Lind's conspiracy. The key paragraph about "the discordance" seems to reinforce the statement we currently make in this article, that any relationship between the object of the conspiracy theory and Western Marxism is not {{tq|clear}}:
{{Talkquote|The discordance appears at two important levels. First, in the interpretation of the true will of the School's leaders: “Did they really plan to do what they have done?” Second, on the consequences the School had on Western values in both Europe and the United States: “Is the destruction of Western values a reality?” Cultural Marxist conspiracy theorists and scholars of the Frankfurt School diverge in their interpretations of these types of questions.}}
: In other words, there is {{tq|no clear relationship}} between these sets of answers, and yet these propositions do clearly define a distinction between scholarship on Marxist cultural analysis and the "efforts" of the conspiracy theorists. I still, frankly, see no there, there. ] (]) 17:06, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
{{re|Mvbaron}}This would not be the page to go into unlimited depth about the conspiracy theory, since this is the page about actual Marxist cultural analysis. However, it is approprate to note the existence of the conspiracy theory and briefly explain how the two relate to each other. In fact, the article does attempt to do that, in a section at the bottom and a sentence in the lede. I assume you do not support removing those parts of the article. What I intend to do is improve that existing section, making it more reflective of the sources. ] (]) 17:29, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
: If your attempt to {{tq|improve}} that existing section is based on the premises that Cultural Marxism is a real thing, and that the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory "engaged with" an actually existing "Cultural Marxism" based on their understanding of its {{tq|actual people and actual work}}, then you are most unlikely to arrive at "improvements" that would ever be supported by the BALANCE of the sources or endorsed by consensus. ] (]) 17:35, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
:I actually don't really care about the conspiracy theory section. (I hope "cultural marxism" will be forgotten in a couple of years and we can remove it). And since there isn't really any academic school called "Cultural Marxism" anyways, RS are hard to come by sadly. Also, our articles on the Frankfurt school are in a rather poor state given the immense body of academic literature on critical theory there is. But I should stop complaining and rather do something about that. Anyways, I agree with Newimpartial above, I really don't think there's much to go on, and trying to establish CM as an actual academic school is already firmly in conspiracy theory land... ] (]) 17:38, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
:: The only quibbles I have here are (1) that the Birmingham School material (and article) are in even worse shape than the Frankfurt School - like the weather, I keep talking about this but nobody does anything about it - and (2) the Frankfurt School and Critical Theory articles are weirdly tangential to one another. It isn't that I think they should be tightly aligned, but I find the disconnect disorienting. ] (]) 17:43, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
'''Comment''' is very ], in the context of the preceding discussion. ] (]) 20:35, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
: {{re|Newimpartial}} In reverting my well-sourced addition of pertinent information, you made reference to ] and ]. Before going further, you should review for yourself the entire content of both of those pages. I will draw particular attention to ] - Do not revert soley for the reason of "no consensus" - and TEND section 2.10, "There is guidance from ArbCom that removal of statements that are pertinent, sourced reliably, and written in a neutral style constitutes disruption." If you believe I have used a source that is not reliable, then identify it. If you believe I have innacurately paraphrased a source, identify the particular text. If you believe an element has been given undue weight, identify that particular element. I will allow some time for you to clarify before restoring the edit. If you continue to have objections, then make the minimum possible revision that would satisfy that objection, rather than reverting the entire edit. ] (]) 20:54, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
::DRNC is an essay. It's totally fine to revert your BOLD edit with reference to this discussion. ] (]) 21:06, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
::{{tq|What the conspiracy theorists mean by "Cultural Marxism" includes actual thinkers and works in Marxist cultural analysis }} - that's a misrepresentation of Jamin's point.
::{{tq|...some of the strands of Marxist cultural analysis that conspiracy theorists have engaged with}} - the conspiracy theorists don't engage academically with anyone.
::{{tq|Where the conspiracy theories diverge from the mainstream}} - misrepresentation of Jamin again: there is no mainstream, and the conspiracy theorists are not doing philosophy or sociology. ] (]) 21:11, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
:: Sennalen, I am one of two editors who believe that you {{tq|have innacurately paraphrased a source}} and {{tq|given undue weight}} to certain claims - this has already been communicated clearly to you in the preceding discussion (but apparently ]). In case it wasn't self-evident, the main disputed passage is this (with particular points of dispute in italics):
{{Talkquote|''however'' the term "Cultural Marxism" is ''also'' used by purveyors of an antisemitic conspiracy theory. ''What the conspiracy theorists mean by "Cultural Marxism" includes actual thinkers and works in Marxist cultural analysis'' but with significant misunderstandings and distortions. ''Joan Braune cites Marcuse on repressive tolerance, Adorno on aesthetics, and Fromm on the psychology of fascism as some of the strands of Marxist cultural analysis that conspiracy theorists have engaged with,'' though mistakenly treating these thinkers as interchageable parts of a coordinated organization rather than disparate individuals pursing their own lines of inquiry. ''According to Jérôme Jamin, "looking at the literature on Cultural Marxism as a piece of cultural studies, as a conspiracy described by Lind and its followers, and as arguments used by Buchanan, Breivik, and other actors within their own agendas, we see a common ground made of unquestionable facts in terms of who did what and where, and for how long at the Frankfurt School.''}}
:: In particular, "however" and "also" seem to be used to imply the unsourced assertion that "Cultural Marxism" has two parallel significations: one for Marxist cultural analysis and another for the conspiracy theory. This is not the main view presented in the RS. The Braune sentence tendentiously lists a series of Frankfurt School ideas {{tq|that conspiracy theorists have engaged with}}, which lends (through selective presentation) misleading support for the idea that conspiracy theorists and scholars are talking about the same thing, which is not at all Braune's actual argument. And the selected quotation from Jamin emphasizes {{tq|a common ground made of unquestionable facts}} which is, again, a misleading selection from the piece; the selection fails to make Jamin's own more fundamental distinctions between the Cultural Marxism of the conspiracy theory and actual Western Marxism. Jamin clearly makes this distinction, and even emphasizes it, but the proposed text does not.
:: I trust that this is "specific" enough, Sennalen. ] (]) 21:18, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
::: Jamin does not emphasize a distinction. Entirely to the contrary, he theorizes that there is a spectrum from conspiracy to non-conspiracy thinking, and that it's difficult to confidently assign many arguments a particular place on that continuum. Jamin, Braune, and Blackburn are all quite explicit that some of the things the conspiracy theorists reference are real facets of Marxist cultural analysis. I understand this is at odds with your personal views on the subject, but if you insist that the sources do not mean the things they say, that leaves no path to consensus. I will seek broader community input after the holidays. ] (]) 22:00, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
:::: There have been repeated RfCs with wide participation that have found, over a number of years, that the reliable sources deal with "Cultural Marxism" only as a conspiracy theory.
:::: As far as Jamin is concerned, I have read these sources and they do in fact make the distinction to which I referred. ] (]) 22:43, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
::::that's an unfair description: newimpartial, you and me all look at the same sources and interpret them differently. There's no need to personalize this. Seeking broader input is a good idea. ] (]) 22:45, 16 December 2021 (UTC)
:There are literally articles claiming that Adorno used music to make people into necrophiliacs. There are literally books claiming The Frankfurt School are Satanic. So yeah, OBVIOUSLY there's a huge difference between the conspiracy theory and what The Frankfurt School and others actually wrote about. IT'S ridiculous to claim otherwise. --] (]) 08:43, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
:{{tq|So we can see there is quite a lot of text available to describe how the conspiracy theorists relate to the sources. They often use them incorrectly and with anti-Semitic intent, but it should be undeniable that there is something real there they have engaged with.}} This is not a page for "Right wing views of Marxist Analysis" - nor is it your personal ] to try and wedge in fringe or right wing content. This is not an exploration of the conspiracy theory (] would be the page for that. --] (]) 08:58, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
::The bottom line is that Misplaced Pages will follow the sources rather than your PoV. Nonetheless, you should consider the following: A common thread in the RS is how talking about the Frankfurt School can be a surreptitous way to introduce anti-Semitic ideas without overtly talking about Jews or Judaism. If we assume instead that conspiracy theorists are ''necessarily'' incompetently frothing at the mouth, we exclude more subtle dog whistles from the label of conspiracy theorist. To do so, besides not following RS, is a more pernicious form of whitewashing. ] (]) 16:41, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
::: This is clearly a topic thwt has nothing to with ]: for this article, all that is required is a straightforward disambiguation between its topic and the ], following the sources. And of course {{tq|Misplaced Pages will follow the sources}} on this matter: it already does, in spite of your (rather strained) assertions to the contrary. ] (]) 16:58, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
:::: If it has nothing to do with Marxist cultural analysis, then would you in fact be in favor of entirely removing the section https://en.wikipedia.org/Marxist_cultural_analysis#%22Cultural_Marxism%22_conspiracy_theory from this article? ] (]) 17:05, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
::::: I do not favor removing the section because, as I said, I think it offers necessary disambiguation for the reader (and provides ] support for the disambiguation in the lead section). However, I do think the section you link to is longer than it needs to be, and its second paragraph in particular wanders off into the weeds.
::::: And just to be painfully clear, what {{tq|has nothing to do with Marxist cultural analysis}} in my view is not the conspiracy theory, which is a kind of Monty Python parody of the Frankfurt School pastiched together with grad school Gramscians of the 1980s, but rather your statement about {{tq|how talking about the Frankfurt School can be a surreptitous way to introduce anti-Semitic ideas without overtly talking about Jews or Judaism.}} That point has nothing to do with Marxist cultural analysis but pertains only to the conspiracy theory. ] (]) 17:14, 17 December 2021 (UTC)


Just to try to nip this in the bud for the 1000s time. @], @], @]. Are you saying this page is about anything Marxist that remotely touches on culture (as Patrick currently has it). So any "study of culture" that mentions or includes, or touches on an element of Marxism, or anything that can be said about those two things together....
===Additional sources===
I found two more useful sources at the conspiracy article, which make less ambiguous statements than Jamin and Braune. The case made by all four in combination is strong.
* Tuters, M. (2018). Cultural Marxism. Krisis : Journal for contemporary philosophy, 2018(2) https://krisis.eu/cultural-marxism/
** "The concept of Cultural Marxism seeks to intro-uce readers unfamiliar with – and presumably completely uninterested in – Western Marxist thought to its key thinkers, as well as some of their ideas, as part of an insidious story of secret operations of mind-control whose nuances may differ but whose basic premise is remarkably similar whether told by Anders Breivik (2011) or Andrew Breitbart (2011)."
** "In an ironical sense this literature can perhaps be understood as popularizing simplified or otherwise distorted versions of certain concepts initially developed by the Frankfurt School, as well as those of Western Marxism more generally."
* "Battista, Christine M.; Sande, Melissa R. (2019). Critical Theory and the Humanities in the Age of the Alt-Right."
** "Minnicino explains that Adorno and Benjamin combined their theoretical efforts to ground aesthetics in materialism, rather than metaphysics or religion. First, Adorno and Benjamin planned to “strip away the belief that art derives from the self-conscious emulation of God the creator”. Second, they encouraged new cultural forms that would 'increase the alienation of the population, in order for it to understand how truly alienated it is to live without socialism.'"
** "Minnicino stresses Benjamin’s working relationship with Brecht and describes the Brechtian technique of verfremdungseffekt ('estrangement effect') as a malicious attempt to 'make the audience leave the theatre demoralized and aimlessly angry.'"
** "Strangely enough, Minnicino does not engage with Adorno’s compositions or writings on music (a target for later conspiracy theorists), but, rather, focuses on his involvement in the Princeton Radio Project."
** "Minnicino overemphasizes Marcuse’s employment by the State Department and CIA to insinuate that he played a major role in the notorious Project MK Ultra"
** "Second, Lind addresses Adorno’s famous work The Authoritarian Personality, in which the F Scale is used to measure and determine a person’s susceptibility to fascism"
** "Third, Lind echoes Minnicino in his puritanical denunciation of Fromm and Marcuse’s theories of polymorphous perversity. He writes that this idea offered a philosophical excuse for the unlimited carnality of the Free Love movement"
** "Finally, he explains that Marcuse’s essay “Repressive Tolerance” serves as the ultimate blueprint for political correctness. He reduces Marcuse’s argument to the claim that everyone on the left should be permitted to speak, but anyone on the right should be silenced."
** "intentional or willful misreading of the Frankfurt School’s work is a common feature of the discourse on cultural Marxism. Given the diminishing influence of the humanities in the university and society at large, it is dishearteningly ironic that some of the only people who take critical theory seriously nowadays are those who egregiously misunderstand it."


...or is it about the academic field that started in the 1960s, as per the ] article? ] (]) 04:17, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
To be clear, none of this needs to be directly described in this article. What this article needs to do is to explain succintly as possible what the relationship is between the conspiracy theory and actual Marxist cultural analysis. It is not in dispute that the conspiracy theorists are factually mistaken and anti-Semitic.
Nonetheless, the thing they are mistaken about is the work of Gramsci and the Frankfurt school. They aren't talking about Charles Darwin, the morning weather report, or the Dead Sea Scrolls. They are talking about the topic of this article.
They are not just mentioning the names of these people. They are talking about specific works and specific ideas in those works, and they are wrong in specific ways. ] (]) 17:51, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
{{Talkquote|Nonetheless, the thing they are mistaken about is the work of Gramsci and the Frankfurt school. They aren't talking about Charles Darwin, the morning weather report, or the Dead Sea Scrolls. They are talking about the topic of this article.}}
: This is a ridiculous ]. We do not have two choices: {{tq|they are talking about the topic of this article}} or they are talking about {{tq|Charles Darwin}} or {{tq|the Dead Sea Scrolls}}.
: Let me very clear about this: the conspiracy theorists are talking about "Cultural Marxism" as though it were a school of thought and a political project that featured shared understandings of the world, values, political objectives and strategies. It is agreed by ''all'' of the reliable sources in this field, including the ones you just cited, that "Cultural Marxism" ''in this sense'' has never existed.
: A minority of scholars have also used "cultural Marxism" (and very rarely "Cultural Marxism") as a synonym for what most of the sources call Western Marxism, or Marxist humanism, or the cultural turn in Marxism in various contexts, or "Marxist cultural analysis" as a more general terrain that encompasses many of the above. These scholars do not typically concretize "cultural Marxism", as you have in this discussion, as though it were a pre-existing discursive bundle that the conspiracy theorists then go on to distort in various ways. In fact, I'm not sure you've shown any scholars doing this: even Jamin typically moves to something more specific, like the Frankfurt School, when discussing the gap between conspiracy theory and scholarly discourse.
: So yes, the conspiracy theorists seize upon specific tropes from the Frankfurt School in general, and Marcuse in particular, to build their Weltanschauung. At the same time they generally ignore Gramsci and Gramscians (such as the Birmingham School) and Marxist humanists (except for Fromm) in their sandcastle-building, even though the latter figures are rather prominent in scholarship about the postwar "cultural turn" in Marxism. This tells me that the terms you have proposed, such as "engagement" or the claim that conspiracy theorists' hostility was directed at {{tq|the actual people and actual work of the Frankfurt School, Gramsci, and others}} are profoundly misleading. For example, the "political correctness" "reading" of Marcuse's "repressive tolerance" isn't based on Marcuse's thought in any cogent way - and even if it were, it would not turn Marcuse into a "Cultural Marxist". Conspiracy theorists grab onto specific concepts (like the ], or ], or ]), rip them out of context, and create conspiracy theory out of them. Only incidentally are any of these building blocks related to ], and most actual Marxist cultural analysis - like the work of E. P. Thompson or Raymond Williams, or for that matter Henri Lefevre and the French 1968 generation - is entirely ignored by the conspiracists. So to say anything like what you have proposed for this article is UNDUE and unsupported by the sources you have provided. ] (]) 18:25, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
:: As an aside, these particular sources do actually reference Gramsci and Fromm as targets of the conspiracy theorists.
:: I personally don't see minor variations of terminology as significant. Language is flexible, and there is no clarity in the denotational boundaries between "cultural Marxism" (small c), "Cultural Marxism" (big C), "Marxist cultural analysis", "Western Marxism", "neo-Marxism", "Critical Theory", etc. Certain authors may delineate these in certain ways, but there's no authority about what these mean across the whole corpus of all authors. The Misplaced Pages articles on all these terms have 80%+ overlap.
:: The rest of what you say only seems like so many different ways of saying "the conspiracy theorists are wrong," which has never been the locus of disagreement. You could make an epistemological argument that if you describe an object badly enough then you have ceased to describe the first object and have instead described some other object, like firing a gun and hitting a bystander, but that would be original research in this context. ] (]) 18:43, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
::: No, I am not simply saying {{tq|"the conspiracy theorists are wrong"}}: it matters what step of their argument loses touch with consensus reality. To simplify what I am saying, the conspiracy theorists have claimed (1) that "Cultural Marxism exists" and (2) that "the conspiracy theory offers a truer account of things than do the Cultural Marxists themselves". In my view, you are conceding that (1) may be true even if (2) is known to be false. Meanwhile, I - following essentially all of the reliable sources in the field - state that (1) is also false. Many, repeated RfCs at Misplaced Pages - mostly prior to or without any of my involvement, btw - have concluded that (1) is unsupported by RS. So your framing the discussion as though I were simply maintaining that {{tq|the conspiracy theorists are wrong}} - without specifying ''wrong about what'' - is eliding the key question on which hundreds of editors have made clear decisions, based on sources and WP policies, over the years.
::: And as an aside, if you are arguing that it doesn't matter what the scholars call those figures and movements that the conspiracy theorists caricature and pastiche as "Cultural Marxism" (in your first paragraph here), then it seems to me you have rather missed the point, since outside the framing by conspiracy theorists the shape of the discursive terrain (say, of ]) bears no particular relationship to the object of the conspiracy theory. Should we be including pomo cultural criticism or crypto-Maoist enterism in this article because the conspiracy theorists consider those to be forms of "Cultural Marxism"? I rather think not - and the RS definitely do not include them in this terrain. ] (]) 19:03, 17 December 2021 (UTC)


:I'm saying that the page is about what the RS secondary literature says the topic is about: namely, the Marxist tradition of studies of culture (which antedates Birmingham by two generations or so). That isn't as inclusive as "any cultural study that mentions Marx", but it also isn't as restrictive as "only the tradition emerging from Birmingham".
{{re|Newimpartial}} I'm beginning to understand some of the contours of your perspective. I do not agree with your narrow construal of certain words, but perhaps we can side step trouble spots with other phrasing. What do you think of this construction?:
:More importantly, the article's scope should follow ''how the HQRS define the topic''. And I don't see anything from Patrick supporting the "all mentions of Marxism and culture" version of the scope - that seems to be a misreading on your part. ] (]) 11:10, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
: Parts of the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory make reference to actual thinkers and ideas that are in the Western Marxist tradition,{{refn|group=Tuters|"The concept of Cultural Marxism seeks to introduce readers unfamiliar with – and presumably completely uninterested in – Western Marxist thought to its key thinkers, as well as some of their ideas"}}{{refn|group=Battista|"Minnicino explains that Adorno and Benjamin combined their theoretical efforts to ground aesthetics in materialism, rather than metaphysics or religion. First, Adorno and Benjamin planned to 'strip away the belief that art derives from the self-conscious emulation of God the creator'. Second, they encouraged new cultural forms that would 'increase the alienation of the population, in order for it to understand how truly alienated it is to live without socialism."}}{{refn|group=Braune|"Herbert Marcuse’s essay on “repressive tolerance” is often cited as the source for the claim that Cultural Marxism is engaged in a “political correctness” project, and the essay is often misunderstood as an argument for state censorship or for social shaming of dissenters."}}{{refn|group=Jamin|"When looking at the literature on Cultural Marxism as a piece of cultural studies, as a conspiracy described by Lind and its followers, and as arguments used by Buchanan, Breivik, and other actors within their own agendas, we see a common ground made of unquestionable facts in terms of who did what and where, and for how long at the Frankfurt School"}}{{refn|group=Blackford|"The same scholarship that supports Schroyer’s analysis, for example, gives a degree of superficial credibility to the likes of Lind, Buchanan, or Breivik."}} but they severely misrepresent the subject.{{refn|group=Tuters|In an ironical sense this literature can perhaps be understood as popularizing simplified or otherwise distorted versions of certain concepts initially developed by the Frankfurt School, as well as those of Western Marxism more generally.}}{{refn|group=Battista|"intentional or willful misreading of the Frankfurt School’s work is a common feature of the discourse on cultural Marxism. Given the diminishing influence of the humanities in the university and society at large, it is dishearteningly ironic that some of the only people who take critical theory seriously nowadays are those who egregiously misunderstand it."}}{{refn|group=Braune|"The conspiracy theory not only misrepresents the Frankfurt School’s intellectual project—it also perpetuates centuries-old stereotypes that dehumanize Jews"}}{{refn|group=Wilson|"The tale varies in the telling, but the theory of cultural Marxism is integral to the fantasy life of the contemporary right. It depends on a crazy-mirror history, which glancingly reflects things that really happened, only to distort them in the most bizarre ways."}} Conspiracy theorists diverge from accepted scholarship by attributing nefarious motives to the Marxists.{{refn|group=Jamin|"The discordance appears at two important levels. First, in the interpretation of the true will of the School's leaders: “Did they really plan to do what they have done?” Second, on the consequences the School had on Western values in both Europe and the United States: “Is the destruction of Western values a reality?” Cultural Marxist conspiracy theorists and scholars of the Frankfurt School diverge in their interpretations of these types of questions."}}{{refn|group=Blackford|"Scholars such as Schroyer and Dennis Dworkin do not, however, suggest that the Frankfurt School or other “cultural Marxists” ever had a plan to destroy the moral fibre of Western civilization, or to use their critique of culture as a springboard to a totalitarian regime."}}{{refn|group=Braune|"But to hear the conspiracy theorists tell it, Critical Theorists want to deny the working class access to culture and religion (specifically Christianity)—in reality, Critical Theory does challenge capitalism and intertwined unjust social structures such as the patriarchal family, but as a project, Critical Theory aims to liberate humanity, not destroy with abandon"}}{{refn|group=Busbridge|"One of the issues associated with the Cultural Marxist conspiracy is that Cultural Marxism is a distinct philosophical approach associated with some strands of the Frankfurt School, as well as ideas and influences emanating from the British New Left. However, proponents of the conspiracy do not regard Cultural Marxism as a form of left-wing cultural criticism, but instead as a calculated plan orche-strated by leftist intellectuals to destroy Western values, traditions and civilisation"}} They also unjustifiably treat disparate Marxist thinkers as an ideological monolith{{refn|group=Braune|"The Cultural Marxism conspiracy theorists are no exception to this lack of distinction-making. First, the ideas advanced by any individual member of the Frankfurt School are generally taken as representative of all members of the Institute; Marcuse’s views on tolerance, Adorno’s aesthetics, or Fromm’s psychoanalytic analysis of fascism cannot be universally attributed to “Critical Theory” as a whole"}}, and exaggerate the actual influence of Marxist cultural analysis in the world.{{refn|group=Braune|"Although some members of the Frankfurt School had cultural influence—in particular, some books by Erich Fromm and Herbert Marcuse were influential on some activists on the New Left in the 1960s—“Cultural Marxism” conspiracy theories greatly exaggerate the Frankfurt School’s influence and power."}}{{refn|group=Jamin|"The discordance appears at two important levels. First, in the interpretation of the true will of the School's leaders: “Did they really plan to do what they have done?” Second, on the consequences the School had on Western values in both Europe and the United States: “Is the destruction of Western values a reality?” Cultural Marxist conspiracy theorists and scholars of the Frankfurt School diverge in their interpretations of these types of questions."}}
:Making it about anything Marxist that remotely touches on culture is a violation of synthesis and weight. Policy however allows articles about where experts have pointed out connections. Per ], we could use Artz's article or similar ones to determine what exactly should be mentioned in the article and what should not.
That sounds like a reasonable addition to ];
:So our story begins with Communists who say that while historically Marxists studied capitalist economics, they would study culture under capitalism. Then we would explain what elements of Marxist theory continued to significantly influence cultural studies and which elements were abandoned. ] (]) 17:51, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
- at least the first sentence - but I'm not sure why anyone would want to include it here. The second sentence is deeply problematic, because it seems to imply that the only, or the most important, difference in perspective between scholars and conspiracy theorists is whether the Marxists had "nefarious motives", which is <s>ridiculous</s> not supported by the sources given.] (]) 22:19, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
:What Newimpartial said.
:The inclusion of the conspiracy theory section in this article is a status quo no one wants to change, and explaining the relationship between the conspiracy and valid scholarship is the most important task for that section to accomplish. There is no need to rehash that again.
:The reason I supported the addition of Trotsky, for instance, was that he is included in an anthology on Marxist literary theory and was assigned reading in a semniar I took on that topic. These are the sort of terms upon which the article should be edited.
:As for what RS consider the difference to be, "nefarious motives" is supported by the citations immediately following. It would be possible to go into more detail, for example something about "destroying Western civilization" but the more text is given to describing the conspiracy theorists' beliefs, the more the weight is undue. Is there something else that in your reading of the RS appears to be the most important point of departure? ] (]) 22:45, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
:While I do not follow this article as closely as you, I have not observed a problem of editors just tacking on people or ideas not that do not receive significant coverage in relevant secondary literature.
:: My reading of the sources tells me that the most important point of departure is that the conspiracy theorists created the object of their framework, "Cultural Marxism", out of a mishmash of the Frankfurt School, intersectional feminism, poststructuralism, sectarian Marxist enterism and American progressive liberalism. I do not see how any section discussing {{tq|the relationship between the conspiracy theory and valid scholarship}} is helpful to the reader if it implies that the conspiracy theorists took an actual "Cultural Marxist" tendency and put their own spin on it, by attributing to it loopy motives or making it "seem more monolithic". The object of the conspiracy theory, which they call "Cultural Marxism" is not a pre-existing "it" that can be interpreted in different ways - it is constructed by the conspriacists out of essentially heterogenous materials. Thwt is what the sources say to me.
:If you can improve the article, please just do. I'm generally very pro-talk page, but whatever's going on here is out-of-control.
:: Putting material into ] seems to me potentially helpful, since the reader might not know that "Western Marxism" is a correct name for one of the main sources used to construct the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory. But the existing text of Marxist Cultual analysis already procides ample acknowledgement IMO, and there is much greater likelihood of misreading the reader into thinking that the conspiracy theorists are ''really'' talking about Marxist cultural analysis. Which, on the whole, the reliable sources say they are not. ] (]) 23:02, 17 December 2021 (UTC)
:Also, for the fourth time, why to you refuse to edit under your username? ] (]) 18:25, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
:::What you're describing is largely what I had in mind with "monolithic". Maybe "syncretic" is a better term. The idea that there is not actually a philosophy/movement there to critique just doesn't hold up. It's Critical Theory. Trent Schoyer was out there calling it Cultural Marxism back in 1973. The conspiracy theorists treat all the scholars as a sort of hydra-headed entity, true. Braune is the only thing I've read that really calls out that behavior, so maybe you can suggest more sources. Braune goes into much more detail however about the instances where the conspiracy theorists are right about what the Frankfurt School says, only considering it to be bad. They are right that the school criticized capitalism, patriarchy, homophobia, organized religion, fascism, and so on. It is true that the Frankfurt School sought positive social change. It's just that being the deplorables they were, the conspiracy theorists didn't like what they heard and called it evil in various ways. ] (]) 00:05, 18 December 2021 (UTC)
::One of the sources used says, "This article highlights several specific concepts in Trotsky’s ''Literature and Revolution'' (1923) which exerted decisive formative influence on critical theory." The claim is questionable and I would only include Trotsky if the claim was routinely made and also explain what that influence was. ] (]) 19:39, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
:::: All I'll say right now is that Schroyer's "cultural Marxism" is not that of Weiner, which is equally distinct from Jamin's fluid notion or the "Cultural Marxism" of the conspiracy theorists. There is no there, there, and assuming that the conspiracy theorists were referring to Marxist cultural analysis in general, as opposed to any of the other nuggets in the soup, seems unsupported and unDUE for this article. (All we really need here is the disambiguation, but the little bit of annotation we have probably does help the reader.) ] (]) 01:50, 18 December 2021 (UTC)
:::As per my comment @], we're also currently saying that Marxism "has no official definition" - because someone said it didn't (which isn't ], plenty of sources offer definitions of Marxism regardless of this non-sense idea that those definitions aren't valid because they're not "official" enough). At the same time we're using weasel words to say that "cultural study" - in the amorphous ] sense, can "arguably" be said to have started in 1859 with one specific Marxist text. All this ] has been added by Patrick.
:::It's part of this desire some have for the page to force a focus on Marxism, rather than what more reliable or high quality sources say about The Frankfurt School, The Birmingham School, or ]. It's quite ridiculous (although slightly better than when it had a section for ] and a stub-section for ]).
:::Really I need someone other than just myself to aid in pointing out when the consensus of high quality sources is being violated, there needs to be a community to actually care about defining the scope of the article so it's a little more constrained by reality. Right now it still feels like certain people want to secure the page as to be a ] for a certain kind of severely undue praise of Marxism, as if we're not talking about Neo-Marxists and Post-Marxists who historically, are recognized as having made the New Left's turn away from traditional Marxist rhetoric. Of course, despite being offered ample sourcing, this is something that the adversarial editors (who trade in Barn-stars) have denied ever happened.
:::To those editors I'd just like to ask: What happened to Truth. We can't all be stuck in the 1950s viewpoint that people like Billy Bragg might represent. That's just Marxist phantasmagoria at this point. ] (]) 09:04, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
::::The definition section is distracting. If readers want to know about Marxism, they should just click on the link. "Cultural studies" is a term referring to a specific tradition and is not about studying culture in general. So Trotsky who was a Marxist and wrote about culture is outside the scope of the article and currently not included. ] (]) 10:23, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::Well, now I regret using Trotsky as an example. To the best of my non-expert knowledge, he's a borderline case, who, if included, would probably be best categorized as a precursor of some kind. I personally do not care at all if we treat him here. If I did, I would have restored the sourced content added by another editor.
:::::I disagree, however, that a "Definition" section is a distraction, and if that's how the current version reads, that means it needs improvement, not removal. Readers should not have to rely on Wikilinks to grasp the basic topic of the article. There are other ways to do this, however, and I would not object if someone reframed the first section as a more historically organized "Overview" or something else along those lines. ] (]) 13:24, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::The article should be about the Marxist influence on cultural studies. Cultural studies refers to an academic field pioneered by the Frankfurt School and continuing today. We should take the word of people writing about the connection who is or was a Marxist and what the influence was.
::::::Terms should only be explained if they are ]. Isn't it obvious that anyone reading an article about Marxism and cultural studies would have an idea about what Marxism is? Even if you wanted to explain it, it would be complex because of the breadth of his writing and different traditions that have followed it. Besides, when we explain what cultural studies owe to Marxism, we are explaining those ascpects of Marxism that are relevant to the article.
::::::You say that, "The term "Marxism" encompasses multiple "overlapping and antagonistic traditions"...and it does not have any authoritative definition." That's true for any ideological or belief system and in fact most concepts in social sciences. But Misplaced Pages articles don't routinely explain terminology used in articles. ] (]) 04:45, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
:::::::If any of the sources used are not representative of this field of study and research, please either remove them (together with any claims that depend upon them) or else add appropriate qualification(s) to the article according to your own best judgment. Do also remove any information about Marxism not relevant to the topic. Readers, though, should be assumed to be broadly ignorant of what this topic is. That's why most of them are here.
:::::::Describing the topic of an article in a general way is a good thing to do for even non-technical articles. "Marxism", however, is a technical term. Unless one has read the scholarship, one probably does not know what it means—even if one thinks one does. Furthermore, some people who have read some of the scholarship, such as our IP editor, define the term differently than the figures covered in this article, who also differ among themselves. Such differences merit explicit acknowledgement and explanation.
:::::::The current version leaves plenty of room for improvement. But we do need a definition section—whatever we might call it in the header. Edit boldly.
:::::::I apologize for the tone, but I find much of the discussion here to be extremely frustrating. It feels like some of the folks here are mostly engaged in a separate argument unrelated to improving this article. (This is not at all specific to you, and I understand that I am implicated as well.)
:::::::Regards, ] (]) 17:27, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
::::::Gramsci btw was the leader of the Italian Communist Party. I don't see why there would be any need for qualification to call him a Marxist. ] (]) 04:51, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
::::IP, I think you ought to read ]. We don't deal in {{tq|Truth}} on Misplaced Pages; we rely on what good sources say. And when good sources talk about Marxist analysis and culture, they count Western Marxism and Neo-Marxism as Marxist, rather than defining Marxism as {{tq|traditional Marxist rhetoric}} and wanting to label "Gramscian" everything in the Western Marxism and Critical Theory traditions - a proposed change to this article's title that I believe you endorsed. That just ain't what the literature do.
::::You have never pointed out a consensus of high-quality sources endorsing your view, either. Instead, you have offered tendentious readings of arbitrarily selected sources; and even those sources don't support your view unless the reader carries the prior assumption that later Marxisms aren't "really" Marxist and then reads the sources with that in mind. To the mainstream scholarly tradition (represented e.g. by Kolakowski), these 20th century traditions ''are Marxisms''. You don't get to create your own alternative facts just because you dispute the scholarly consensus on this. ] (]) 13:22, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
::::This isn't a page about the history of Marxism in general—neither in the intellectual realm, nor in the political. It's also not the place for us editors to pass judgment on the tradition. If you spot any ] terms or inappropriate ], please simply remove the offending adjectives or rewrite or remove the sentence as appropriate.
::::If you can improve the article by more carefully defining the relationships of the figures covered to Marx's own ideas (or to the USSR or other states, as sources determine appropriate), please do. ] (]) 14:29, 1 December 2024 (UTC)


== Article title ==
{{tq|The idea that there is not actually a philosophy/movement there to critique just doesn't hold up.}} - it seems fairly clear to me that you're a subscriber of the conspiracy theory, and are here to justify it (to blur the line). You don't have a ] snowball's chance in hell of doing that. You're claiming there's a movement? Of what, academics who don't call themselves "Cultural Marxists"? No one we've mentioned self-describes that way, how can you claim there's a movement?... Do you see how that's kind of; a conspiratorial way of thinking, in that YOU see the conspiracy but others don't see it that way. What you're attempting is complete ] ] as far as I can tell. Trying to justify a conspiracy theory because no one points to a line and says "Here! This is the absolute line between truth and conspiracy" - well grow up. That's not what we do here. We report on sources, we don't get to interject, interpret or synthesize. {{tq|What this article needs to do is to explain succintly as possible what the relationship is between the conspiracy theory and actual Marxist cultural analysis. }} - NOPE! There is no policy that backs up YOUR "need" here. That's what makes it ] that it's YOUR intent for the article. What you want Misplaced Pages to say. That's not what goes on here. Even if you could find a claim that says whatever it is you want - it would still be just ONE single source. Your attempts here are totally ] and I'd suggest to you, that for your own sanity, you give up your snowball mission, and consider the fact that Misplaced Pages doesn't have needs (or at least, not the needs you're claiming). It has policies, and what you're attempting to do, goes against those policies. --] (]) 03:02, 18 December 2021 (UTC)
:The pertinent guideline is ]. The rest of your diatribe deserves no response. ] (]) 04:28, 18 December 2021 (UTC)


There earlier appeared to be some consensus for changing the title of this article to either "Marxist cultural studies" or "Marxism and cultural studies". My preference is for the former, but I would also be fine with the latter.
{{Collapse top|References}}
{{reflist|group=Tuters}}
{{reflist|group=Battista}}
{{reflist|group=Jamin}}
{{reflist|group=Braune}}
{{reflist|group=Blackford}}
{{reflist|group=Wilson}}
{{reflist|group=Busbridge}}
{{Collapse bottom}}


Shall we proceed with this? I think either would be a small improvement, but I don't want to cause a ruckus if there is not, actually, a general consensus.
== Proposed edit re: the conspiracy theory ==


Also, in keeping with my issues with the current title, I have nominated ] for deletion. Please ] if you feel this is a mistake.
I hope everyone has had an enjoyable holiday. Following the discussion above, I propose a new edit to the conspiracy theory section, which can be seen at . This will satisfy some of my concerns on WP:V and WP:ONEWAY, and also incorporates feedback from Newimpartial and others in the following respects:
*The wording is more cautious about how the conspiracy theorists reference actual work.
*Additional sources are cited so it does not lean exclusively on Jamin.
*The section overall is shorter, better satisfying WP:WEIGHT.
*The "no such thing" objection of Braune is highlighted. (If there are other good RS with a similar message, they can be appended.)
] (]) 19:16, 27 December 2021 (UTC)
: My objections to this proposal are essentially the same as my previous objections, above. In particular, the proposed first sentence, {{tq|The term "cultural Marxism" has been used in a general sense to discuss Marxist ideas in the cultural field;}} without the {{tq|while}} and {{tq|also}} of the long-stable version, creates BOTHSIDES quality (that "people referring to 'Cultural Marxism' might be referring to the conspiracy theory or to Marxist cultural analysis"), that is not supported by the BALANCE of the sources cited, much less the available sources.
: Also, {{tq|Parts of the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory make reference to actual thinkers and ideas that are in the Western Marxist tradition}} is a selective and UNDUE statement for an article on Marxist cultural analysis, and {{tq|Conspiracy theorists diverge from accepted scholarship by attributing nefarious motives to scholars,and by exaggerating the actual influence of Marxist cultural analysis in the world}} falls precisely into the objection I raised above - it concedes (against all available RS) that the conspiracy theorists are talking about "the same tradition" addressed in this article as Marxist cultural analysis, but then attribute to it nefarious motives and exaggerated influence. '''This is <s>hogwash</s> entirely unsupported by reliable sources''' and should never be stated in Misplaced Pages - this is not what Braune, Jamin, etc., are actually saying (although they are cited here for support) and the proposal not only to include this statement '''but to make it in wikivoice''' is absurd and entirely noncompliant with ], much less ] and ]. ] (]) 19:33, 27 December 2021 (UTC)
:: Other than what I have proposed and the status quo, is there any other option you think should be put forward as an option when seeking community input? ] (]) 19:58, 27 December 2021 (UTC)
::: I don't see any reason why your ONEVERSUSMANY alternative should be presented at RfC. ] (]) 20:02, 27 December 2021 (UTC)


: It makes it sound as if the conspiracy theory is an exaggeration of reality rather than a fabrication. I agree though that Breivik gets too much space. ] (]) 20:16, 27 December 2021 (UTC) Thanks, ] (]) 20:33, 4 December 2024 (UTC)
:: I agree it would be an improvement to change "attribute nefarious motives" to "fabricate nefarious motives". The intent is to be absolutely clear and explicit that the conspiracy theory is wrong. ] (]) 20:27, 27 December 2021 (UTC)


== The role in cultural and social topics. ==


The original 2014 version of this article had the following passage:
Here are the contours of the disagreement as I understand it.
#Whether {{tq|Parts of the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory make reference to actual thinkers and ideas that are in the Western Marxist tradition, but they severely misrepresent the subject.}} is a faithful summary of the sources. I have given nine passages in six sources that support these claims. (At the bottom of this edit: ). Newimpartial says I have not interpreted these passages correctly. I do not understand what Newimpartial's interpretation would be well enough to attempt to summarize for them.
#Whether it is undue weight to discuss the conspiracy theory on the page for Marxist cultural analysis. The page already included a section and a lede sentence on this connection. No one has shown any deviation from the consensus that such a section belongs on the page. Therefore, I do not consider objections along these lines to be in good faith.
#Whether the passage, if faithful to the sources, is nevertheless selective or cherry-picked. I assert it is not, since if the section is to exist, the first duty of the section, per WP:ONEWAY, is to describe the relationship between the section topic and the article topic. I attempted to do this, not using favored sources, but the best review articles already appearing on this page and the conspiracy theory page. The passages chosen seemed to be the most pertinent to the question, and contrasting claims in the same article were not excluded.


"An outgrowth of Western Marxism (especially from Antonio Gramsci and the Frankfurt School) and finding popularity in the 1960s as cultural studies, cultural Marxism argues that what appear as traditional cultural phenomena intrinsic to Western society, for instance the drive for individual acquisition associated with capitalism, nationalism, the nuclear family, gender roles, race and other forms of cultural identity;
I believe #1 is the true, primary locus of dispute. If Newimpartial agrees that this is the case, then it would be productive to open an RfC on the narrow question of whether the passage faithfully reflects the sources. It would be especially helpful if before the posting they would provide a contrasting summary of the passages I have cited or else pointers to passages they believe are more reflective of the relationship between the conspiracy theory and Marxist cultural analysis. On the other hand, if there's no agreement on the locus of dispute, it would be better to begin the process at the dispute resolution noticeboard. ] (]) 21:37, 27 December 2021 (UTC)
: Other people should weigh in here, but briefly, I do not accept this framing. In particular, I do not accept the spin that Sennalen has placed on ], the most relevant passage of which (I believe) is: {{tq|If mentioning a fringe theory in another article gives undue weight to the fringe theory, discussion of the fringe theory may be limited, or even omitted altogether}} - while I am not arguing that the ] should be omitted altogether from this article, I do believe that discussion of it must be limited for reasons of ] ]. Note also that the point of the subsequent passage of ONEWAY. {{tq|Fringe theories should be discussed in context; uncontroversial ideas may need to begin referred to in relation to fringe theories}} applies to the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory article, not this one - the conspiracy theory needs to be distinguished from actually existing Western Marxism, but Western Marxism does not need to be distinguished from the conspiracy theory. This is the whole point of ONEWAY, which does not at all support Sennalen's proposal here. ] (]) 00:02, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::The exact part I had in mind was {{tq|Fringe views, products, or the organizations who promote them, may be mentioned in the text of other articles only if independent reliable sources connect the topics in a serious and prominent way.}} Essentially, finding RS connecting Marxist cultural analysis with the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory is a necessary condition for mentioning anything about the conspiracy theory on this page. ] (]) 00:09, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::: Necessary, sure, but not sufficient. ] (]) 00:15, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:::: Again, would you like to entirely remove any mention of the conspiracy theory from this page? ] (]) 01:05, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::::: No, but perhaps the mention could be briefer, as TFD has suggested. ] (]) 03:14, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:{{tq|I believe #1 is the true, primary locus of dispute.}} I disagree. I'm not so much interested in dissecting ] or using this page to draw clarification between two other pages (that's not the purpose of this page, this page is for clarifying the works of The Frankfurt School, The Birmingham School and E.P Thompson). I don't really understand the goal here, or why it's being done on THIS page in particular. ] is not monolithic, it's very broad and can encompass everything from Marx himself to the post-modernists (if one were so inclined). We have a page for clarifying ] already. For me, what you're really completely overlooking are cases like when Breitbart states ''"Theodor Adorno promoted degenerate atonal music to induce mental illness, including necrophilia, on a large scale. He and Horkheimer also penetrated Hollywood, recognising the film industry’s power to influence mass culture."'' or when Lind writes ''"Today, when the cultural Marxists want to do something like “normalize” homosexuality, they do not argue the point philosophically. They just beam television show after television show into every American home where the only normal-seeming white male is a homosexual (the Frankfurt School’s key people spent the war years in Hollywood)"''...
:Both of which are absolute falsifications. Hence part of a conspiracy theory.
:To say Lind, Breitbart, Kellner and Adorno are all fundamentally talking about the same thing... well that's just absolute poppy-cock to me. So there's definitely more outlandish conspiracy claims which are being overlooked, swept under the rug, it's more than "The Frankfurt were nefariousness vs no they weren't". So for me: Western Marxism can't be summed up easily, nor should it have to be (particularly not on this page)... and outlandish claims are being overlooked and downplayed. That's my problem with your approach Sennalen. --] (]) 02:02, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::That's all great. What are your reliable sources? ] (]) 02:32, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::: How about backing off the ]ing? The RS on these topics are ''already in the article''. ] (]) 03:14, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:::: It should be trivial in that case to cite some in support of your point of view. ] (]) 03:37, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::::: I am not the IP, and my tolerance for marine mammals is presently waning. ] (]) 03:39, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:::::: Forgive me, it was an easy mistake to make. I would guess you do not agree with the IP editor that what the edit principally needs is another sentence or two clarifying that the conspiracy theorists make outlandish claims? That would make it slightly longer rather than shorter. ] (]) 04:24, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:::::::Is that the complaint? That the section is too long? I'm still not sure why all this is necessary. Anyone care to fill me in? --] (]) 10:21, 28 December 2021 (UTC)


reference: ^ a b Merquior, J.G. (1986). Western Marxism, University of California Press/Paladin Books, ISBN 0586084541"
:::] doesn't apply to talk page discussions, but no doubt ] does account for the inclusion of such quotes as long as they are contextualized. If you just want links to where these authors make those claims, they are and . My point is that are extraordinary and outlandishly incorrect claims being made as well as more reasonable half-truths and misrepresentations and the academic history/facts. I believe there's at least one book which suggests The Frankfurt School were in league with the devil (by Michael Walsh). So yeah it's more than just whether the FS had ill intent. It's weather they were Satanists, Necrophiliacs, Putting homosexuals on television, wrote all the Beatles songs, or were trying to destroy western civilization and Christianity. That's far more than just distorting the academic facts, that's going off the deep end.


:::At any rate, why focus on this here, rather than at the Conspiracy Theory main page. My understanding of the Main page tag, aka "Main article: Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory" - is that it's meant to indicate we're quoting from ], we're not meant to be forming consensuses on this talk page that would effect the ] article. --] (]) 05:46, 28 December 2021 (UTC) so, could we add the topic of the Marxist Cultural Analysis that it does not stop at being just anti-capitalist but also critiques traditional societal norms in culture? the source is from the university of california from 1986, before the 1990s so it's not refering to the conspiracy theory when it refers to the marxist cultural analyis as "cultural marxism" but the original 1973 definition of the term. ] (]) 17:18, 24 December 2024 (UTC)
::::To recap for the IP and anyone else not following along, the root cause is the sentence in the lede which cites Jamin to say there is "no clear relationship" between the conspiracy theory and Marxist cultural analysis; however, Jamin describes several points of similarity and difference. "No clear relationship" is not a reasonable gloss. That's what I first called attention to, but consensus is ], so the task became to put correct information in the appropriate section. There was already a section about the conspiracy theory in this article, and there is no consensus to remove it. Newimpartial had a valid concern that increasing the size of the section gives ] weight, and I agree. However, per ] the first duty of the section is to describe how the section relates to the article topic, which is precisely the information I want to add. Trimming the length must come from any other kind of information already present. There appears to be consensus at least that Anders Breivik has nothing to do with Marxist cultural analysis. The remaining difficulty is that Newimpartial does not believe my summary is supported by the sources I have given. ] (]) 13:53, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::::: You are still misreading ONEWAY: that piece of guidance does not justify adding the information you wish into the section. The information this article requires is the accurate summary, {{tq|While the term "cultural Marxism" has been used in a general sense, to discuss the application of Marxist ideas in the cultural field, the variant term "Cultural Marxism" generally refers to an antisemitic conspiracy theory}}. There is no justification for the material you wish to add: {{tq|Parts of the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory make reference to actual thinkers and ideas that are in the Western Marxist tradition, but they severely misrepresent the subject. Conspiracy theorists diverge from accepted scholarship by attributing nefarious motives to scholars, and by exaggerating the actual influence of Marxist cultural analysis in the world.}} The ''juxtaposition'' offered by the stable article text is a BALANCED summary of the sources; the ''derivation'' of the conspiracy theory from Marxist cultural analysis (or from Western Marxism - which ''isn't even the topic of this article'') is not supported by sources or policy.
::::: Once again, ONEWAY properly understood doesn't require that this article contain additional information about how the CT relates to this article's topic - it says that the article ''about the FRINGE theory'' needs to be contextualized by the relationship to mainstream scholarship, not the other way around.
::::: Finally, you haven't shown any relationship between Marxist cultural analysis (and you keep eliding to Western Marxism, which is telling) and the object of the conspiracy theory that would be both {{tq|clear}} and based on ]. The indisputable fact that some conspiracy theory figures name-drop certain (predominantly Jewish, but otherwise apparently random) figures from the Frankfurt School, etc. does not create a "clear" relationship to Marxist cultural analysis, and each of your attempts to do so has run afoul of ] and ]. I would suggest that you give it a rest. ] (]) 14:46, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:::::: "Marxist cultural analysis" is not a term of art. Arguments from definition are destined to fail because there is no authoritative definition in RS. It's a generic application of "Marxist" as an adjective to "cultural analysis" as a noun. It's an uncommon turn of phrase in the literature, with even less attestation than "cultural Marxism". The referents of "Marxist cultural analysis", "cultural Marxism", and "Western Marxism" are all (approximately) Lucaks, Gramsci, the Frankfurt School, and the Birmingham School. Near as I can tell, the only reason we have a page by this name is some editors are taking great pains to avoid the phrase "cultural Marxism" because of its culture war implications. Anyone whose first concern is point-scoring in the culture war is ]. The first sentence of ONEWAY is about including fringe topics in non-fringe articles, which applies here. The dilemma is that if (as you believe) there is no relationship established in RS then there should be no mention in the article (except a disambiguation note). I bring this up as a hypothetical only, on account of the fact that RS do connect the topics. ] (]) 15:29, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::::::: I do not understand why you keep returning to the (permissive) first sentence of ONEWAY, when the most relevant sentence is later in the same paragraph: {{tq|If mentioning a fringe theory in another article gives undue weight to the fringe theory, discussion of the fringe theory may be limited, or even omitted altogether.}} Just because I am not motivated to "omit altogether" does not mean that "limiting" discussion to what is necessary for the RS topic is not the way to go - it is exactly what policy requires.
::::::: Obviously there is a relationship between the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory and Adorno or Marcuse, just as there is a relationship between other antisemitic conspiracies and the Rothschilds or Soros. But WP does not concede to the far right that {{tq|Parts of the ... conspiracy theory make reference to actual (wealthy Jewish financiers), but they severely misrepresent the subject. Conspiracy theorists diverge from accepted scholarship by attributing nefarious motives to (financiers), and by exaggerating the actual influence of (wealthy Jewish financiers) in the world}}. I trust that the relevance of this parallel is obvious. ] (]) 15:42, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:::::::: The relevance is not at all clear, since my text summarized RS about this topic, while your parody is invented about another topic. We agree that the best consequence of policy is to limit discussion to what is necessary. What is necessary is to summarize how RS connect the topics. Since you do not consider my edit to be the best implementation, provide an alternative with support from RS. ] (]) 15:51, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
{{Od}}Your proposed text has not {{tq|summarized RS about this topic}} - you have selected passages out of context, from sources that have not reached your selected conclusion at all, and employed ]. But even if the support for the "Cultural Marxism" passage were the same as that for the passage I imagined about the financiers, it would not be an appropriate summary and WP would not include either summary in article space.
I don't see any problem with the current opening sentence of the section, which is amply supported by the BALANCE of RS. I am not going marine mammal hunting. ] (]) 16:04, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
: Please identify the synthesized claim(s) or specific passage(s) that are out of context. ] (]) 16:09, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:: I have already identified the two relevant sentences. I am not going to specify further, per ]. ] (]) 16:18, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::: Synthesis involves combining two claims in RS to reach a conclusion that is not in RS. You have not identified the claims that are combined, nor the synthesis that is unsourced. You have not identified a specific quotation that is out of context, nor elucidated what you consider the correct context. You continue to cast aspersions on my willingness to go above and beyond the call of duty in eliciting actionable objections and finding support in the RS for your point of view. ] (]) 16:34, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:::: None of the citations you have offered in support of this passage conclude that the most significant differences between actual Western Marxism and the object of the conspiracy consist in {{tq|misrepresenting}} {{tq|actual thinkers and ideas}}, {{tq|attributing nefarious motives}} and {{tq|exaggerating...actual influence}}, as opposed to, say, fabrication or antisemitic caricature. Your isolation of and emphasis on these elements represents an ] reading of the sources you are citing in support of your proposal - in other words, ].
:::: By the way, I have cast no ASPERSIONS whatsoever on your motives in this discussion, as opposed to your comment above, {{tq|Near as I can tell, the only reason we have a page by this name is some editors are taking great pains to avoid the phrase "cultural Marxism" because of its culture war implications. Anyone whose first concern is point-scoring in the culture war is WP:NOTHERE.}} While this goes not clearly apply to anyone in this discussion, it seems equally clear that it is intended as an ASPERSION - though it is entirely unsupported by evidence, in violation of the ]. ] (]) 16:50, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
::::: Please be more precise in your policy objections. OR is a claim for which no RS source exists. SYNTH is a subtype of OR that involves connecting two RS claims (such as "A because B" when A and B have RS but "because" does not.) You have not subtantiated a case of OR or SYNTH. If you believe I have incorrectly emphasized something, that is an error of ]. If you believe I have not accurately paraphrased a source, that is a violation of ].
::::: Please also be more precise in deploying RS in support of your content interpretation. Quote actual text rather than just an author's name or a vague assertion that sources exist. ] (]) 17:25, 28 December 2021 (UTC)


:::: I agree with Newimpartial. The fact that the conspiracy theorists attribute the origins of the conpiracy to actual people who peformed Marxist cultural analysis doen't make it any less of a conspicacy theory. Over the centuries, conspiracists continually update the theory to include actual people. If someone says Donald Trump is part of the conspiracy, and some conspiracy theorists believe he is, that doesn't make the theory more true just because Trump is a real person. ] (]) 17:20, 28 December 2021 (UTC) :Can you quote the page no. where the source actually uses the term cultural Marxism? Just because the article used the terminal does not mean the source did. Also, what relevance is it if the term cultural Marxism was used? ] (]) 18:39, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
::i mean, you could just replace "cultural marxism" with "marxist cultural analysis" and just call it a day. ] (]) 19:38, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
::::: {{re|The Four Deuces}} This does not speak to the disagreement. The cultural Marxism conspiracy theory is a wrong, false, antisemitic, ridiculous, fabricated, evil, outragous, indefensible, lunatic conspiracy theory. The proposed edit does not contradict that at all. ] (]) 17:29, 28 December 2021 (UTC)
:::The article already says that. In fact, I don't know what is inherently anti-capitalist about it. They were basically criticizing the same cultura as American conservatives do. ] (]) 21:06, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
::::No, american conservatives aren't attacking them from an anti capitalist or pro socialist perspective. like the frankfurt school ] (]) 21:25, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
:::::The Frankfurt school did not oppose pornography etc. because it was capitalist, but because they saw it as demeaning and exploitive. Presumably, conservatives would agree. Their difference would be about why exploitation exists. A socialist would be more likely to attribute it to social systems, while a conservative would attribute it to human nature. ] (]) 17:36, 21 January 2025 (UTC)

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Sources for "any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis"

Thread retitled from "Unsupported lede claim that the conspiracy theory doesn't have "any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis"".

What sources support this claim?

The cited source (Braune 2019) says: "The term does appear very occasionally in Marxist literature, but there is no pattern of using it to point specifically to the Frankfurt School"--this is a specific claim about the Frankfurt School, not the concept of Marxist cultural analysis as a whole.

In fact, other sources specifically identify a clear relationship between the conspiracy theory and Marxist cultural analysis:

  • Jamin 2018: "When looking at the literature on Cultural Marxism as a piece of cultural studies, as a conspiracy described by Lind and its followers, and as arguments used by Buchanan, Breivik, and other actors within their own agendas, we see a common ground made of unquestionable facts in terms of who did what and where, and for how long at the Frankfurt School."
  • Tutors 2018: "In an ironical sense this literature can perhaps be understood as popularizing simplified or otherwise distorted versions of certain concepts initially developed by the Frankfurt School, as well as those of Western Marxism more generally." Stonkaments (talk) 20:54, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
The full quote from Braune is Furthermore, there is no academic field known as “Cultural Marxism.” Scholars of the Frankfurt School are called Critical Theorists, not Cultural Marxists. Scholars in various other fields that often get lumped into the “Cultural Marxist” category, such as postmodernists and feminist scholars, also do not generally call their fields of study Cultural Marxism, nor do they share perfect ideological symmetry with Critical Theory. The term does appear very occasionally in Marxist literature, but there is no pattern of using it to point specifically to the Frankfurt School--Marxist philosopher of aesthetics Frederic Jameson, forexample, uses the term, but his use of the term “cultural” refers to his aesthetics, not to a specific commitment to the Frankfurt School. In short, Cultural Marxism does not exist—not only is the conspiracy theory version false, but there is no intellectual movement by that name. Her overall point is that those scattered usages are without coherent meaning, and that the usage in the conspiracy theory is not connected to any real-world ideological framework. Jamin and Tutors don't disagree; Jamin's point is that the conspiracy theoriests are consistent with each other, not with reality. And if you read the next sentence of Tutors, it is clear the irony he is talking about is the way in which the conspiracy theorists themselves fit into the Frankfurt School's view; One such example might be the concept of “the Cathedral” (Yarvin 2008), developed by figures in the so-called neo-reactionary movement on the far right as a kind of critique of the hegemonic, unconscious consensus between powerful figures within academia and the media who use the concept of “political correctness” as a tool of oppression developed by those who (falsely) imagine themselves as being oppressed. He is saying that the irony is this mode of analysis is in line with what the Frankfurt school believed, not that the conspiracy theory itself has merit. --Aquillion (talk) 21:03, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
  • I’m not convinced that the claim “without any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis” is adequately supported by the cited source. As OP notes, the Braune paper does not assert any claims about “Marxist cultural analysis” as a whole. Instead, the quoted statement specifically references “the Frankfurt School.” If we are now equating the two, how do we justify the existence of a separate article on “Marxist cultural analysis”?
There is another logical inconsistency. Braune states that the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory misrepresents the Frankfurt School’s ideas and influence. Logically, if A misrepresents B, then A must have at least one clearly defined relationship with B, meaning it misrepresents it. Therefore, it is contradictory to claim that there is no clear relationship between the two.
Thirdly, to highlight another logical inconsistency: if there is no (clear) relationship between “Marxist cultural analysis” and “Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory,” then why do these two Misplaced Pages articles extensively link to each other?
Lastly, I searched for the term 'clear relationship' and found an archived discussion from 2021 that includes this phrase. Unfortunately, that discussion quickly devolved into arguments about the conspiracy theory. Here, I hope we can stay focused on this article and the specific issue of consistency with logic and sources. 87.116.182.140 (talk) 12:07, 26 October 2024 (UTC)
You must be new to Misplaced Pages, Welcome to Misplaced Pages! What you're confused about is called Wikivoice. One of the statements is us REPORTING on Braune's viewpoint (aka an WP:INTEXT). The other is in Wikivoice. For more information, click this link to the policy: WP:Wikivoice. I hope that clears things up for you. P.S Also, usually new additions to the discussion, or new comments on the talk page go at the bottom of a page as per WP:Indent, Misplaced Pages has a lot of these policies and guidelines, and your time here will involve less conflict if you learn about them. 101.115.143.188 (talk) 01:13, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
Also, just adding to this, they're usually easier to learn about if you sign up an account - because you'll be told about them, and given other helpful tips on your talk page. 101.115.143.188 (talk) 01:26, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
That information is already included in the third paragraph of the lede section:

"The tradition of Marxist cultural analysis has also been referred to as "cultural Marxism", and "Marxist cultural theory", in reference to Marxist ideas about culture. However, since the 1990s, the term "Cultural Marxism" has largely referred to the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory, a conspiracy theory popular among the far right without any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis."

So Misplaced Pages has already done its due diligence to represent the major academic viewpoints in as accurate manner as possible for this topic. 101.115.139.171 (talk) 03:21, 19 October 2024 (UTC)

Poll

How should we address the issue raised in this discussion?

  1. Do nothing.
  2. Remove the phrase “without any clear relationship to Marxist cultural analysis” from the sentence. See diff.
  3. Replace it with: “However, since the 1990s, the term 'Cultural Marxism' has frequently been associated with Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory embraced by the far right, which distorts the ideas and impact of the Frankfurt School.” See diff.
  4. Something else (please specify).

Shall we take a poll? 87.116.182.140 (talk) 10:12, 30 October 2024 (UTC)

  • Option 3, because it clarifies the original sentence and is closer to what the source (Braune 2019) states: the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory misrepresents the Frankfurt School’s ideas and influence. :87.116.182.140 (talk) 10:13, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 1 - no clear reasons to change the sentence have been presented in this discussion, and option 3 in particular presents a (sourced) statement out of context, in wikivoice, in a way that posits a determinate relationship between the conspiracy theory and the Frankfurt School in a way the sources, taken as a whole, do not support. Newimpartial (talk) 00:31, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
    Seconded. There's still no clear ideological, political, or academic movement calling its self "Cultural Marxism". No academics identify that way. So Braune is accurate to the academic viewpoint. 101.115.130.228 (talk) 06:40, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 1 or remove the final paragraph of the lead entirely (that is, remove any mention of cultural marxism in any context from the lead completely) per my arguments above. Perhaps some rewording is possible, but I'm not seeing any of these as an improvement; a central point in the sources is that the conspiracy theory is not connected to reality and that "cultural marxism" isn't a concretely-defined thing, which needs to be clearly conveyed if we are going to mention it at all. The connection is tenuous enough that it would also be reasonable to remove it from the lead; it's just not leadworthy. --Aquillion (talk) 15:42, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
    Unless it's covered by high-quality sources on Marxist cultural analysis, I support removal of the conspiracy theory from the lead and the article. Patrick (talk) 18:12, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 3, because this is important enough to mention in the lead, and reliable sources are in agreement that there is some connection between the conspiracy theory and ideas from the Frankfurt School. Could maybe tweak the wording somehow to emphasize that the connection between the two is imprecise, but to deny that any connection exists is plainly wrong and contradicts the sources. —- Stonkaments (talk) 02:34, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
    Re: reliable sources are in agreement that there is some connection between the conspiracy theory and ideas from the Frankfurt School - they aren't, though. That's the whole problem. There isn't any particular connection between the FS and the CT, except for some misleading name dropping. Newimpartial (talk) 09:00, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
    It can be argued that A misrepresenting B isn't a real relationship, but that leads us into semantics. It's better to use clearer language to avoid confusing the reader. Misrepresents is clearer than "without any clear relationship," and it's the phrasing currently used in the CT article lede. 87.116.182.140 (talk) 09:59, 1 November 2024 (UTC)
  • Option 1 and strongly Oppose 3. The conspiracy theory has no relationship with the Frankfurt school, as it has no relationship to anything actually real. That the conspiracy theory use "cultural Marxism" and "Frankfurt school" is in no way meaningful, they are just words used as dog whistles without any real connection to the actual subjects. -- LCU ActivelyDisinterested «@» °∆t° 12:39, 7 November 2024 (UTC)

Historical vs Contemporary

I've created this temporary division on the page whilst the discussion on what counts as Marxist cultural analysis continues to sort its self out. As a rule of thumb; if a theorist/school uses or comes after the creation of Gramsci's sense of hegemony, it's probably contemporary. If not, it's probably historical. Keep in mind this page should be for the WP:Primarytopic (which does discuss the "profit driven" aspects of Capitalist hegemony), and we should keep that in mind as we want to avoid becoming a WP:Coatrack article. 101.115.143.188 (talk) 03:24, 27 October 2024 (UTC)

Trotsky (1879 – 1940) and Gramsci (1891 – 1937) were contemporaries. If categorization and subdivision is needed, it should probably use different labels than Historical vs Contemporary. 87.116.182.140 (talk) 18:03, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
Trotsky doesn't use the term hegemony, and thus, isn't really known for having done a modern, sociological version of Marxist cultural analysis. The main jumping off point for this page is Gramsci, and descendant theories, such as The Frankfurt School, The Birmingham School, and E. P. Thompson. You can read the lead section to understand the primary topic, and definition of terms that make up the subject matter intended for this page. 101.115.143.188 (talk) 05:01, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
  • The mid-20th century is not “contemporary”.
  • EP Thompson’s work is not derived from Gramsci but from other traditions.
BobFromBrockley (talk) 05:14, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
Hi! I appreciate the effort to organize the article. Do you by chance have a source to support this distinction? I don't have a particular problem with it other than it seems weird to call someone who died in 1937 a contemporary of us in the 21st century. This cut-off would also relegate the other major figure featured in the lead (but conspicuously absent in the body), early Lukaćs, to history. Maybe that's not a problem, but it feels a bit arbitrary.
Cheers, Patrick (talk) 18:05, 27 October 2024 (UTC)
Actually, Lukaćs uses the term hegemony throughout History and Class Consciousness (but of course, this is just the English translators choice in 1972, almost 50 years after it was originally written), I'm not that familiar with how much he references the industrialization of the mechanisms of cultural reproduction (eg. culture as an industrial function of Capitalism) - but I think given that he seemingly discusses cultural hegemony in some way that could be translated, then by virtue of that you're free to include him in the contemporary section (at least, that's how I see this suggested division playing out). I don't want to be too strict with this. I'm assuming the reasons Lukaćs hasn't been included thus far is because he's not as influential or well known as Gramsci and The Frankfurt School et al.
I don't personally see the use of 'hegemony' as being an arbitrary inclusion requirement for a theorist to be seen as 'contemporary' (although if it comes down to a question of translation, it does become more arbitrary). Either way, to me it's simply coherent with the lead section. The lead section appears to be an enduring aspect of the page, and hence crucial to the subject matter within the contemporary context (especially in regards to Sociology and Neo-Marxism).
I believe concessions were given in the above section (eg. "It never occurred to me, for instance, that Trotsky did not belong; yet the IP editor makes a compelling case.") but I don't want to step on any toes, and I think it's a complex topic area that we're all being careful to not limit too much - whilst still having some direction (and my suggestion is just that we follow the lead). My understanding is still that the article was intended to be about contemporary Marxist cultural analysis WITHIN the sociological context, and that even that much is a misnomer, as all Marxist cultural analysis is almost by definition Neo-Marxist (Karl Marx having not done much cultural analysis at all).
But you are indeed correct - it feels odd to say theories from the 1930s are contemporary. In my view this is more a problem of just how effective Cold War propaganda was on American (and hence global) cultural hegemony, WW2 is often a common demarcation and turning point for the consideration of what is "contemporary". It defined a lot of the new western mode of global analysis, internationalism, and trade. We (as in the cultural majority) are only just now catching up to the theorists of back then, but if you have less questionable terms for the headings, I'm all for finding a better match. "Pre-hegemonic theory" and "Post-hegemonic theory" might be more direct for instance (albeit, not a traditional division that Misplaced Pages pages commonly use).
Sorry if this response is not satisfying, I suppose another option would be to use Pre-WW2 and Post-WW2, and have sections for Gramsci and Lukaćs in the former, making it a purely chronological division. 101.115.143.188 (talk) 05:27, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for this detailed reply!
It is a Misplaced Pages guideline (and I think a very good one) that WP:LEADFOLLOWSBODY. (Edit: that's actually an individually authored essay, but it is largely an explication of MOS:LEADREL.) Unless there is a literature that supports limiting this article more narrowly than what is included in anthologies and introductions to Marxist cultural/aesthetic/literary analysis/theory/studies, I believe the article should be open to encompass all material commonly included in such overview publications, and the lead should be edited accordingly.
Lukaćs is widely credited with reinjecting Hegel into Marx, whom he additionally synthesized with Weber. There would be no Frankfurt School without him. Per just my own reading of History and Class Consciousness, I do not believe that "hegemony" is a key term for him. What he does is theorize commodity fetishism as an empirical totality under the heading of reification, which he presents as the form of false consciousness that must be overcome by a genuine class consciousness.
None of that (of course!) is at all on you to add, but is just to say that he theorizes independently and in a significantly different way what is at least more-or-less the same phenomenon as Gramsci. This is low on my to-do list because I don't have a great source ready to hand, but I'll add a section on him at some point in the future if no one beats me to it.
I don't have any proposals with respect to section headings and organization—other than that I think we should continue to keep it chronological, absent a strong reason to do otherwise. We should probably also remove the maintenance template added in response to the addition of Trotsky. The way that he is treated in the lead should probably be adjusted as well to avoid overstating his influence on the Western tradition stemming from Lukaćs and Gramsci.
Cheers, Patrick (talk) 17:11, 28 October 2024 (UTC)
Lead did follow body until someone decided that the title of the page referenced all of Marxist cultural theory, because they didn't understand that the title was actually a way of avoiding the Neologism "Cultural Marxism" whose primary topic was a conspiracy theory, and hence problematic under WP:NEO. This was one of the reasons the original Cultural Marxism page was deleted, as per the AfD, and one of the reasons that title can't be used (because it was salted WP:SALT).
So a much more efficient and effective way to make the lead follow the body, would be to delete the sections that go against the purpose of the page up until now (eg. everything under the "Historical Approaches" section), and rename the page.
What your proposing (re-writing the lead to fit new additions that have been made to the body) would break it's relevance to the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory page, and drastically change the direction of the page. So it seems, we really have an issue with the title of the current page, which should perhaps be changed to "Gramscian cultural analysis".
Rather than straining to make additions to the page, and risking turning it into a coatrack for any Marxist past or present who remotely touches on, or mentions culture (regardless of whether those comments formed a solid theory or mode of analysis), I move that we simply re-title the page. That way we can keep the current lead, and majority of the contents, and avoid recreating the Western Marxism page or making a WP:coatrack here. After all it's clear neither of us have time for a large amount of copy editing right now.
Do you oppose this path forwards? If so, it may be a time for an RfC, to take the burden of deciding the fate of this page off our shoulders, and we can have it instead put on the wider community where it perhaps belongs. But if you don't oppose this path forwards, I'm happy to discuss what the appropriate naming should be, and then to get that done. 101.115.143.188 (talk) 04:54, 29 October 2024 (UTC)

Contemporary to what? Visite fortuitement prolongée (talk) 18:05, 29 October 2024 (UTC)

The usage of the term "Hegemony" and the idea that culture is "mechanically reproduced". As per the lead. eg. Gramscian marxist analysis as being a landmark or watershed that altered the history of Marxist analysis from then on. 101.115.130.228 (talk) 08:45, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
So the 1920s and the 1930s. But the 2 subsections of «Historical approaches» are about the 1920s and the 1930s too («Marxist-Leninist analysis of culture during the 1920s and 1930s», «In Literature and Revolution , Leon Trotsky»), so your titles are incorrect. If you want to distinguish groups/persons who carried Marxist cultural analysis and groups/persons who carried something similar but different, then a correct title would be «Similar approaches» instead of «Historical approaches». Visite fortuitement prolongée (talk) 10:42, 30 October 2024 (UTC)
This raises the question of why we have historical approaches at all, like Trotsky and Marxist-Leninism just isn't a classification The Frankfurt School and post-Gramscian cultural theory fits into.
People have just added that to the page because they've looked at the title and assumed it belongs here. So the question is - does it? We could change the name of the page to resolve this, or just allow the page to be a WP:coatrack of Marxists who have discussed culture. 101.115.130.228 (talk) 06:45, 31 October 2024 (UTC)
«This raises the question of why we have historical approaches at all» => The section was titled «Development of theory» from the creation of the article in 2020 to Special:Diff/1208602111 in february 2024. Visite fortuitement prolongée (talk) 08:32, 31 October 2024 (UTC)

Coatrack.

At this point the article has become a coatrack. It now starts with Leon Trotsky (for some reason), being classed as a "main author" (of what?) along side Gramsci, The Frankfurt School, who specifically said they wanted to be "equidistant from Marxism, and Capitalism" , and The Birmingham School, which was in part founded by Richard Hoggart who expressed an aversion to Marxism . The page has two side bars. It has tacked on sections at the end for Marxist-Leninism, and the cultural Marxism conspiracy theory. The title of the page is clearly too broad for what it was intended to be (what the lead section describes, or once described), and we now have too many editors trying to go in too many different directions with it.

In short it's become an unmanageable WP:coatrack and should probably be deleted. 101.115.130.228 (talk) 12:49, 1 November 2024 (UTC)

Mischaracterization of major thinkers.

The majority of theorists on this page, weren't Marxists. Many explicitly weren't Marxists (as per the previous section of this talk page)... they were NEO-Marxists at best, and some weren't even that. Thus, it's inappropriate for Misplaced Pages to be labeling and categorizing thinkers, theorists, and historical figures, as Marxist when they weren't Marxists. Getting basic categorization correct isn't too much to ask, and isn't unreasonable. These thinkers really shouldn't be bookended by Trotsky and Marxist-leninism as if that was their domain. 101.115.130.228 (talk) 02:05, 2 November 2024 (UTC)

See Etymological fallacy. It doesn't matter whether these people were Marxists, but that they were identified as cultural Marxists. The West Indies isn't actually off the coast of India, but we can refer to people as West Indian. TFD (talk) 02:57, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
Leon Trotsky and "Marxist Leninism" was never identified as "cultural Marxism". Gramscian cultural analysis was (eg. people influenced by Gramsci, like The Frankfurt School, The Birminham School, and E.P Thompson). "Marxist cultural analysis" is just Misplaced Pages's term, due to "Cultural Marxism" being most well known as a right wing WP:NEO Neologism. So someone randomly chose an alternative they thought matched enough. But they didn't foresee the consequences.
Trying to preserve the term "Marxist cultural analysis" when it's just Misplaced Pages's arbitrary choice for the article (eg. it's our choice, not the prevalent academic term for Gramscians) doesn't make any sense. Misplaced Pages's chosen term, isn't accurate... I agree the page is essentially supposed to be about "cultural Marxism" (The Frankfurt School, The Birminham School, and E.P Thompson) - but Trotsky and the section for "Marxist Leninism" don't belong here then, and shouldn't be included.
They've been included because the page title Misplaced Pages has landed on, is too general. It should be changed to "Gramscian cultural analysis" (and the redirect on Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory updated accordingly). WITHOUT doing THAT, you have a general sounding page title, that doesn't retain its original function. So it includes a section on Trotsky, and Marxist-leninism for no real good reason (other than the arbitrary page title WP:NEO, allowing them to be included, because it's now a broader topic than it should be.117.102.133.36 (talk) 06:05, 3 November 2024 (UTC)
Cultural hegemony is averaging less than 1 view/day and could be cannibalized to improve coverage of Gramsci in this area. I'm not sure why, though, you think this article is properly about him and his heirs/successors/whatever. Why not just let it be whatever is covered in an introductory cultural studies course on Marxist theory?
The problem is that the body is underdeveloped and doesn't appear to follow any particular secondary literature. My approach would be to look at a few anthologies or introductory overview sources. The figures or schools that receive the most attention in the most of them are what should be covered here. Surely this would include precursors such as Marx himself and perhaps Trotsky as well.
But no one is asking me for an assignment...so, over and out.
Cheers, Patrick (talk) 19:50, 5 November 2024 (UTC)
I stated directly above that several of the thinkers/groups listed weren't particularly Marxist, and can best be described as neo-Marxist OR LESS. Such as Hoggart (of The Birmingham School) whose described in academic sources as having an aversion to Marxism ... and The Frankfurt School who are widely understood to have been critical of both Capitalism AND orthodox Marxism, wanting to be (as the internet encyclopedia of philosophy page for Adorno states) equidistant and critical of both systems ("The final break with orthodox Marxism occurred with the Frankfurt School’s coming to condemn the Soviet Union as a politically oppressive system. Politically the Frankfurt School sought to position itself equidistant from both Soviet socialism and liberal capitalism. The greater cause of human emancipation appeared to call for the relentless criticism of both systems.").
So to proclaim them as a major part of MARXIST cultural analysis, is a falsification of their position. This (along with my other complaints to you about Trosky's inclusion) is precisely why I don't think the page title is appropriate, and is in fact, a mischaracterization of the bulk of the authors being used (eg. from The Frankfurt School, and Birmingham School).
Saying "we can just add more thinkers" doesn't resolve the problems with their inclusion. Removing Trotsky and this silly little stub section about "Marxist-lenism" and renaming the page to Gramscian cultural analysis DOES resolve these issues (and is a lot easier, doesn't require handing out assignments, or cannibalising other pages).
P.S Misplaced Pages isn't about the popularity or view count of pages, saying "this page gets less views, so we should canibalise it" goes against being here to WP:BUILD and encyclopedia, which is suppose to be a repository of authoritative knowledge, not a popularity contest, or a website for only the knowledge which is popular or widely viewed/clicked/desirable. 117.102.149.13 (talk) 04:54, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
I support development of this article's coverage of Gramsci. Copying from the article I mentioned would be one very easy way to do this, and I'm sure the original contributors would be happy to expand the reach of their work. (For instance, the Frankfurt School section was lifted from my own rewrite of the lead to that article. My reaction was basically just "Lazy, but sure, fine—I did a decent job with that sentence.")
Although I will probably check in on this article from time-to-time, I am unfollowing. The discussion here is too rarely about improving the actual article. Those reading this should be aware that I am extremely unlikely to support renaming or deleting this article. Please don't ask. Feel free, though, tag me in any discussion about improving the article.
Cheers, Patrick (talk) 13:31, 6 November 2024 (UTC)
I’ve trimmed Hoggart. There are no non-Marxist thinkers now taking up space. Frankfurt School were Marxist; they broke with orthodox Marxism not with Marxism. Have also slightly expanded Gramsci. BobFromBrockley (talk) 04:48, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
Sorry I didn’t expand Gramsci. I expanded content about him in the Birmingham sdxifoj. His section could still do with more adding. I also expanded Frankfurt section. BobFromBrockley (talk) 05:09, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
No offense, don't make the article flow better or easier to read - and it's not a good idea to try to remove Hoggart as if he wasn't part of The Birmingham School when he (along with Raymond Williams) was one of the two founding members. 101.115.128.228 (talk) 05:56, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
The IP comment seems to assume that the scope of this page is (or ought to be) "Gramscian cultural analysis", but that doesn't reflect reality or this article's sources. Of the main groups discussed in the article, only the Birmingham School is (mostly) Gramscian. In so far as the Frankfurt School share a common intellectual heritage, that would be Lukacs (e.g., his Hegelian Marxism), not Gramsci. And I can't think of any of the Marxist Humanists who carry any particular Gramscian influence (though they were all by definition Marxists, and some were also Hegelian).
The IP comment also carries the odd implication that Soviet Marxism and/or "Orthodox Marxism" are the real Marxism, but when it comes to cultural analysis that simply isn't the case. The question whether Frankfurt or Birmingham scholars performed Marxist analysis of culture (a concept that includes what some more nitpicky writers have called Marxisant analysis) - well, that's a question for the literature, and to the best of my knowledge the literature says that they did. Newimpartial (talk) 05:28, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
Pretending Gramsci and Hegel are somehow competing schools is a false dichotomy. Most Gramscians are Hegelians. The polemics of class politics is kind of ingrained in the idea of hegemony, that there might be a popular or ruling class culture, then a working class culture that competes with it. That's obviously a Hegelian position Gramsci is taking. 101.115.128.228 (talk) 05:53, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
This allegation that Gramsci was a Hegelian, and that his thought somehow paralleled that of Lukacs who influenced the first generation of the Frankfurt School, is unsupported by evidence and looks to be WP:OR. Newimpartial (talk) 10:30, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
Yes well, @Newimpartial the critical theorists are now apparently cast as Orthodox Marxists, and Hoggart has been removed from The Birmingham School - as per the thread immediate above this one ("I’ve trimmed Hoggart"). Immediately below this one, you have Patrick saying he wants to put Trotsky back in. Have fun with all this re-writing of history, it's what you wanted for the "Critical Theorists" isn't it? 101.115.128.217 (talk) 00:56, 14 November 2024 (UTC)

Consensus

@Newimpartial @Patrick - so you've both made these weird additions to the page then run away? You've created a quagmire but don't want to defend it here? You just want to recreate the article on Western Marxism, cast founders of Critical Theory as just simple Marxists, not particularly doing a new kind of cultural analysis: a Gramscian cultural analysis. But instead lump them in with Marx, Lenin, Trotsky... Stalin? Mao? Where are you guys drawing the line on this - if anywhere? Basically you're saying - the modern left are communists. Not in so many words, but you're essentially saying: They have the same theories and use the same form of analysis AS COMMUNISTS (which ignores their LARGE BODIES OF CRITICISM OF SOVIET MARXISM AND ITS CULTURE)...

...you're saying, they don't need to appeal to hegemony, and that's not a particular characteristic of their pursuit, they're just Marxists, just like Trotsky, Lenin, Mao... that's what YOU TWO specific authors/editors have argued and supported on this page. Now you're just running away. Just lumping the founders of modern left-wing theory, with the indefensible nature of Leninism, Maoism, and Stalinism, and then running away as if that's right? That's OUTRAGEOUS is what it is, tantamount to little more than VANDALISM. There's no reason for a Western Marxism coatrack to be recreated here.... and if you're not going to argue these points when there's CLEAR AND OBVIOUS AND EXTENSIVE OBJECTIONS, and REASONABLE SOURCE BASED ARGUMENTS AGAINST IT! Then I see no reason your personal opinions (and that's what they are) should hold sway here. Especially and particularly if you're not going to do the copy writing to make clearer your distinctions, or why say, Mao's cultural analysis might be different from Habermas' - if you're just going to do the damage and run away without addressing these things, these arguments AGAINST what you've done, well that's not really a consensus. Consensus is formed by ARGUMENTATION, NOT THE POPULAR VOTE. 101.115.145.140 (talk) 23:04, 6 November 2024 (UTC)

I'm afraid I do not understand this comment. My actual position is that this article needs to follow the high-quality sources (i.e., scholarship) on the various Marxist traditions offering analysis of culture, in some rough proportionality to the way those traditions are covered in this scholarship.
By my reading of that scholarship, most of the Marxist analyses scholars incorporate when discussing this topic take the form of "critique", including Hegelian Marxist (Frankfurt School), Gramscian, and Marxist Humanist traditions (only a portion of which would normally be considered as "Western Marxism"). Some scholars incorporate Marxist theories of culture from before Lukacs and Gramsci, potentially including classical Marxist, Orthodox, and Leninist or Trotskyite approaches. Likewise, I believe some scholars include such later developments as Critical Theory (post-Marcuse), Socialist Feminist analysis, and Laclau&Mouffe-style post-Marxist approaches to cultural critique.
In my view, all of these elements belong here to the extent that scholarship supports their inclusion. It is my impression that scholarship does not notably support the inclusion of explicitly Stalinist or Maoist approaches, so I'm not at the moment convinced that they should be included (I say "avowedly" here to pre-empt arguments that "X scholar was a member of a 3rd International party/promoted Maoist causes and therefore should be excluded based on their political affiliation" - I don't see those facts as relevant to determining what contributions are or aren't part of an intellectual tradition).
Also, I am deeply puzzled by the reference here to CLEAR AND OBVIOUS AND EXTENSIVE OBJECTIONS - objections to what? If the allegation is that clear, obvious and extensive objections have been raised to the existence of this article - well, that issue isn't really on topic for this Talk page. If these supposedly "clear" objections are focused on some more specific aspect, I'd really appreciate being told what aspect that is.
The final confusion I have about this comment is that it treats Western Marxism as though it were all Gramscian and based on the concept of hegemony, which is demonstrably false and therefore makes it harder for me to triangulate where the IP's comment is intended to lead. Newimpartial (talk) 00:58, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
I completely agree with NewImpartial. OP in this thread is also pretty abusive. BobFromBrockley (talk) 04:50, 7 November 2024 (UTC)
I've already told you (and it's noted in the copy of the article) that multiple authors referenced on the page aren't Marxists. The majority are Neo-Marxists, and some are explicitly not-Marxist (eg. Hoggart, Habermas).
It's also clear that ALL of the theorists are from or related to the Gramscian school of cultural analysis. The only one that wasn't - was Trotsky, and he was correctly hat noted, as perhaps not being relevant.
He's not relevant (was not a Gramscian, nor was he particularly doing a cultural analysis, he was writing about a Utopian vision he had for culture). The lead has always referenced components of Gramscian cultural analysis. This mischaracterization of these thinkers, has now been corrected by moving the page.
HOWEVER - I whole heartly support you, and who ever else is interested in the project, creating another page which is more widely focused on Marxist cultural theory in general. But that's never been the scope of this page. The theorists on this page, have always centered around Gramsci, hegemony, and the eras in which the mechanical reproduction of culture by industry became noteworthy, under the term the culture industry.
Again I want to ENTHUSIASTICALLY ENDORSE, your idea of having a wider page that covers all strains of Marxist cultural analysis. However that was never the intention behind this page. As soon as this page was created, it was used as a hatnote on Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory and is referenced on the talk page there, MANY TIMES, as being the more realistic take on The Frankfurt School, Gramsci, and the other thinkers who were interested in the effects of hegemony in the Culture Industry. 101.115.128.228 (talk) 05:49, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
The IP makes a number of mistaken statements here, including that As soon as this page was created, it was used as a hatnote on Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory. This isn't so. And none of the claims made by the IP qualify as "clear" or "obvious"; they read rather as an idiosyncratic WP:IDONTLIKEIT objection to mainstream scholarship on this topic.
As noted previously, the argument that all those discussed in this article (except Trotsky) are Gramscians is blatantly false; so is the assumption that "Neo-Marxist" and "Marxist" are mutually exclusive categories. Therefore, I have reverted the undiscussed page move, for which I have seen no support on Talk apart from the IP. Newimpartial (talk) 10:38, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
Well NewImpartial, now that you've made your bed, you'll have to sleep in it.
Soon this page will become a WP:Coatrack and there'll be not possibility of drawing a line for what can or can't be included. It will become less and less of an appropriate hat note for the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory page.
...and by the way, this page was actually created from a DRAFT of a Cultural Marxism article - which can be found here - but for some reason you yourself blanked. So whether you admit it or not - this page was originally written to only include thinkers relevant to that term. 101.115.128.228 (talk) 12:08, 12 November 2024 (UTC)
While there were problems with early drafts of this article - which I tried to address with my edits of November 2020 - I don't think any version of it was especially dependent on material from Jobrot's draft, which I blanked after they became inactive. Newimpartial (talk) 14:21, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
I don't have particularly strong feelings about it, but I would support restoring the Trotsky material, perhaps as a "precursor" theorist. Aside from being a major figure in his own right, he's at least sometimes anthologized on cultural stuff. Patrick (talk) 18:17, 13 November 2024 (UTC)
Well Patrick, you, Newimpartial, and BobFromBrockley currently have the consensus. So you're free to add back in Trotsky, and whatever other Marxists you see fit at your leisure. I'll be stepping away from the two articles on here I've been involved with. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 00:58, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
It is my impression that scholarship does not notably support the inclusion of explicitly Stalinist or Maoist approaches. @Newimpartial
Stalin and Mao didn't have notable approaches to cultural analysis? You are aware of the Cultural Revolution right? Or Socialist Realism. How does that not fit with the current title, which is apparently supposed to be a catch all for Marxist cultural theories. Why do Mao and Stalin fall out of that purview? Plenty has been written on the techniques of cultural manipulation performed by both Mao and Stalin. Why shouldn't the scholarship around Stalin's Speech (via his representative) Andrei Zhdanov, to the 1934 Soviet Writers Congress , be included as an expression of his "Marxist cultural analysis"????? Like, if you want the page title to be about that - there's no limits between Stalin and Habermas. Nothing in between them. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 20:24, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
To answer your question, notable approaches to cultural analysis does not, in my view, equate to a catch all for Marxist cultural theories. I suspect you aren't a fan of the term "critique", but there is an evident difference between the analysis of culture performed by a Benjamin or a Gramsci, and "cultural theories" of Stalinist or Maoist varieties - or even Constructivist or Situationist cultural theories (which I personally find much more amenable). This isn't a matter of Marxist critique=ILIKEIT and Marxist cultural creation=IDONTLIKEIT, either; I really like Constructivism, as should be clear from my tattoos, and I find a lot to like about Situationism as well. But they don't belong here, because while they are cultural projects they aren't in any important sense cultural analysis.
You can read Billy Bragg as E P Thompson applied to cultural creation, and that doesn't make Bragg cultural analysis, either - but Thompson definitely is.
Also, as an aside, to preempt some of the discussion in the IP's more recent section: none of the choices to be made in this article's content and terminology ought to be settled by leaning into any supposed conventions emerging from disciplinary sociology. The best scholarship on Marxism is basically not by sociologists, while the best scholarship produced out of the sociological imagination in this area is by political sociologists, who do not generally observe those conventions. More fundamentally, the idea that Marxist ideas can be vivisected and divided into separate impacts on economic, political and social thought is absurd; Marxist cultural analysis is a good example of an instance where political economy (q.v. "mechanical reproduction"), sociology and philosophy intermingle - or rather, they cannot really be distinguished at all. Newimpartial (talk) 21:03, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
My god I find Billy Bragg to be cringe worthy. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 04:27, 15 November 2024 (UTC)

Cultural Marxism disambiguation

Somebody created a page at Cultural Marxism (disambiguation) last week, pointing to this page and the conspiracy theory by that name. How do other editors feel about this? Newimpartial (talk) 23:06, 9 November 2024 (UTC)

This is a multi-page WP:CROSS-POST . I suggest moving the discussion to Talk:Cultural_Marxism_(disambiguation). 87.116.177.103 (talk) 23:28, 9 November 2024 (UTC)

Cultural Marxism (disambiguation) has an RfC

Cultural Marxism (disambiguation) has an RfC for possible consensus. A discussion is taking place. If you would like to participate in the discussion, you are invited to add your comments on the discussion page. Thank you. 87.116.177.103 (talk) 11:24, 11 November 2024 (UTC)

No, it is NOT academic to label The Frankfurt School as Marxists.

I'm porting my sources over from the AfD Misplaced Pages:Articles_for_deletion/Cultural_Marxism_(disambiguation) because I'm sick of people saying there's no academic backing for my viewpoint. That viewpoint being that whilst Critical Theory originated from Marxist principles, it is not its self a Marxist philosophy. That's why it's called Critical Theory - because it represented a BREAK from Marxist and even Neo-Marxist approaches:

  • Source 1 - "Hoggart’s political viewpoints were not outwardly expressed until much later in life, and make clear his aversion to Marxism"
  • Source 2 - "The final break with orthodox Marxism occurred with the Frankfurt School’s coming to condemn the Soviet Union as a politically oppressive system. Politically the Frankfurt School sought to position itself equidistant from both Soviet socialism and liberal capitalism"
  • Source 3 - "This is Habermas' basic judgment on Marx: Marx's praxis philosophy is still a kind of subjective philosophy, while behind the concept of “labor” in praxis philosophy is still a single rationality: cognitive-instrumental rationality." (hence why we don't say Habermas is a Marxist on his page - because he wasn't.)
  • Source 4 - A whole article about The Frankfurt School's anti-communism, and their involvement with the CIA (even listing the small amount of work Horkhiemer did for the Congress for Cultural Freedom).
  • Source 5 - "Phil Slater traces the extent, and ultimate limits, of the Frankfurt School's professed relation to the Marxian critique of political economy... ...He shows that, in particular, the analysis of psychic and cultural manipulation was central to the young rebels' theoretical armour, but that even here, the lack of economic class analysis seriously restricts the critical edge of the Frankfurt School's theory."
  • Source 6, page 10 - "Nothing intrinsicaly Marxist, that is to say, defines "cultural Marxism," save for the evocation or hope of a postbourgeois society... ...The mistake of those who see one position sequeing into another is to confuse contents with personalities."
  • Source 7 - "The Frankfurt School, known more appropriately as Critical Theory"
  • Source 8 - "As Daniel Morley explains, these were the pseudo-Marxist ideas of the so-called Frankfurt School... ...Their lives are spent in the ivory towers of academia, churning out anti-Marxist verbiage."
  • Source 9 - "There are two distinct periods in the work of the Frankfurt school....The second period is that of the postwar years, in which there was a social consensus that was formed under the umbrella of the cold war and rising prosperity (what the French call Les Trente Glorieuses) and in which it was declared that class and class struggle had come to an end. Frankfurt school theories about commodification, alienation, reification and false consciousness were revived by the 1968 movement as a way of explaining away the apparent passivity of the working class. Indeed, it was during this period that the working class began to be seen as part of the problem rather than the solution. The forward march of labour was halted, social democratic and communist parties accommodated to the new consensus and, as the philosopher André Gorz had it, it was "farewell to the working class"."
  • Source 10 - "A considerable part of the leading German intelligentsia, including Adorno, have taken up residence in the ‘Grand Hotel Abyss’ which I described in connection with my critique of Schopenhauer as ‘a beautiful hotel, equipped with every comfort, on the edge of an abyss, of nothingness, of absurdity. And the daily contemplation of the abyss between excellent meals or artistic entertainments, can only heighten the enjoyment of the subtle comforts offered.’ (The fact that Ernst Bloch continued undeterred to cling to his synthesis of ‘left’ ethics and ‘right’ epistemology (e.g. cf. Frankfurt 1961) does honour to his strength of character but cannot modify the outdated nature of his theoretical position. To the extent that an authentic, fruitful and progressive opposition is really stirring in the Western world (including the Federal Republic), this opposition no longer has anything to do with the coupling of ‘left’ ethics with ‘right’ epistemology.)"
  • Source 11 - "As is reasonably well known, the early years after the Institute’s founding seem an anomalous period in retrospect. Gerlach’s untimely death in October 1922 led to the appointment of Carl Grünberg as the Institute’s first director. He ensured that the Institute’s Marxism would assume a fairly orthodox cast. Martin Jay, citing a letter from a student at the Institute during the mid-twenties, characterizes it as ‘unimaginative’, suggesting that the student’s attitudes would ‘be shared by the Institute’s later leaders, who were to comprise the Frankfurt School. . . ’.footnote8 However that may be, the research carried on prior to Horkheimer’s directorship scarcely corresponds to the School’s conventional image. "

So no there's not some lack of sources on this. It's not some aberration or unsourced claim to say The Frankfurt School and other strains of Critical Theory (such as The Birmingham School) weren't Marxist in their mode of analysis. They were breaking from Marxism. They're Sociologists, NOT political ideologists (the same can be said for The Birmingham School).

To put them back there, and re-label them as Marxists, IS the position that lacks sources. Ergo - they don't belong on this page as it is currently titled. It's not some absurd claim to say they weren't Marxists (even if they started out with Marxist principles as a key influence/guide, that doesn't warrant putting them under such a heading). The real absurd and unsourced action here, is filing them next to Trotsky as fellow Marxists, or trimming the amount of mentions of people from these schools if they're not Marxist enough to fit in with the current page title. That's absurd. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 10:09, 14 November 2024 (UTC)

This looks a lot like the Gish gallop approach I have seen so many times on this page - the sources also do not support the claim of the section title ("it is NOT academic to label The Frankfurt School as Marxists") nor so they support the conclusion ("not Marxist enough to fit in with the current page title").
Many of these sources say nothing whatsoever about whether Frankfurt School thinkers were Marxists, and the ones that do are overwhelmingly sectarian tracts rather than peer-reviewed scholarly sources.
As far as "Critical Theory" is concerned, (1) this isn't used as a synonym for the Frankfurt School in its first generation, and (2) this article doesn't claim all of Critical Theory as Marxist cultural analysis. So I'm not seeing any there, there. Newimpartial (talk) 15:56, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
So when you said we follow the sources - you meant only when it's convenient for you. I wonder why you think they were called Critical Theorists if they were in fact just Marxists.
"not Marxist enough to fit in with the current page title" was in reference to Hoggart's mention being "trimmed" from The Birmingham School because sources (that you're now saying aren't valid because there's too many) state his aversion to Marxism. Sounds like you're conflicted on when a source counts and when it doesn't. So when there's not enough of them, there's not enough of them, and when there's too many of them it's the Gish gallop, rather than a widely accepted viewpoint. Again I ask: Where are your sources saying they're Marxists? You've presented ZERO sources, I've apparently presented too many, from too a wide array of people. What a hypocrisy.
Like there's a reason Peter Thompson (director of the Centre for Ernst Bloch Studies at the University of Sheffield), The New Left Review, Lukács, The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy, and two academics (eg. the sources that aren't "Sectarian") are agreeing with the three that perhaps could be described that way (Marxist.com, thephilosophicalsalon.com, and historian Paul Gottfried)... it's because it's a widely held viewpoint. I don't see how including 3 authors from outside the left/academia, suddenly invalidates that, or makes it a Gish Gallop. It doesn't. You just don't like that it's a widely held viewpoint across multiple different perspectives (most of whom are left wing academic sources). What you're really saying is WP:IDONTLIKEIT. Again, all of this is in defense of a poorly titled page. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 20:05, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
This is where the debate currently sits. 8 reliable sources (eg. The director of the Centre for Ernst Bloch Studies at the University of Sheffield. The New Left Review. Regular peer reviews/edited academics and authors). 3 less reliable sources (Marxist.com, Thephilosophicalsalon.com, Paul Gottfried). BOTH groups of sources all express general agreement. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 04:35, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
You are misconstruing most of these sources - the viewpoint you are attributing to them is at best a mistake. None of the higher-quality sources you've cited actually present the Franfurt School as non-Marxist. Newimpartial (talk) 11:28, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
Source 1 most definately says Hoggart had an aversion to Marxism.
Progressives using Marxist frameworks for social aims, but they don't push for anything particularly Marxist. They critique Capitalism as per Source 2's statement on their positioning themselves equidistant between the two systems.
Source 3 says correctly that Habermas wasn't particularly Marxist. Hence us not calling him a Marxist on his Misplaced Pages article.
'Source 4 I can understand dismissing.
Source 5 does explicitly note their lack of economic class analysis, because they're Sociologists, not Ideologues or Marxist political theorists (as I've been saying). Source 9 (which is from an expert on them) concurs with this view. So these two quality sources are backing each other up.
Source 6, page 10 I can understand dismissing.
Source 7 is an encyclopedic reference which correctly positions them - unlike our article.
Source 8 I can understand dismissing.
Source 9 already mentioned above, but again, Direct of the Ernst Bloch society is a very relevant field.
Source 10 whilst is WP:Primary and a well known criticism, so I can understand dismissing.
Source 11 is a very credible source. The Frankfurt School veering well away from Marxism (particularly under Horkhiemer) is a well known part of their history.
Making those cuts, that's still 6 WP:RS sources, which are definitely saying what I'm claiming they're saying. It's there in black an white. I find Source 9 PARTICULARLY condemning of the current page because it's from a very credible expert, and it's stating a well known fact about The Frankfurt School's post WW2 turn away from Marxism. This is also discussed in sources 2, 11, and 5.
So to claim these well known turns didn't occur within The Frankfurt School - leading them from being essentially a study group of Marx, through being Marxian Sociologists, to being so far removed from that (in the post-WW2 period) that they became "Critical Theorists" with, as multiple sources note, a separation from Class Politics and what's understood as a Marxist politics. This is just how they evolved. This is the history of The Frankfurt School - whose main notability to English Speakers - IS their post-WW2 phase!
You can deny it in short form terse responses (without any sources of your own).... but that doesn't stop it being there in black and white. I'm merely here to make sure your hypocrisy in passing The Frankfurt School off as Marxists, is noted for the record. 101.115.147.34 (talk) 13:56, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
That is a good first purge of the sources the IP presented originally, but let's look at the ones that remain:
  • source 1 presents Hoggart as anti-Marxist, so editors have removed him from this article.
  • source 2 says nothing about Adorno being anti-Marxist, but presents an opposition to "orthodox Marxism". The key word there being "orthodox".
  • source 3 says nothing about Habermas being opposed to Marxism; it presents Habermas's interptetation and critique of Marx.
  • source 5 is a reprint of a 1977 publication; I don't see anything in it arguing that the Frankfurt School isn't Marxist.
  • source 7, once again, presents Frankfurt School theorists in opposition to "orthodox Marxism", not as anti-Marxist.
  • source 9 doesn't present any opinion that I can see on whether the Frankfurt School was or wasn't Marxist.
  • source 11 doesn't identify the Frankfurt School as non-Marxist or anti-Marxist, though it does have something to say about the opposition between these scholars and Soviet Communism.
So from this review, I am counting zero sources treating the Frankfurt School as external to or opposed to Marxism. In their conclusion above, the IP has also thrown in Class Politics and what's understood as a Marxist politics as though those phrases included an operational definition of what counts as "Marxist" - but, ever since Marx's "I am not a Marxist", the actual use of the term has been more nuanced than that. The sources this article uses clearly treat most Frankfurt and Birmingham School writers as participating in Marxist traditions. Newimpartial (talk) 13:56, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
source 1 presents Hoggart as anti-Marxist, so editors have removed him from this article.
Yes, you've decided to remove one of the two founding members of The Birmingham School, because their views are inconvenient to your argument. This is Revisionist History and shows you're not here to WP:BUILD and accurate encyclopedia.
source 2 says nothing about Adorno being anti-Marxist, but presents an opposition to "orthodox Marxism". The key word there being "orthodox".
Orthodox Marxism is generally what Marxism means. When you say someone was a Marxist, or doing something Marxist, it generally refers to Orthodox Marxism, rather than Neo-Marxism, or Post-Marxism.
source 3 says nothing about Habermas being opposed to Marxism; it presents Habermas's interptetation and critique of Marx.
A critique, is somewhat of an opposing statement. But again, I didn't say he was OPPOSED to Marxism, I said: he wasn't a Marxist.
source 5 is a reprint of a 1977 publication; I don't see anything in it arguing that the Frankfurt School isn't Marxist.
That's why I bolded it for you. It says they had a "lack of economic class analysis" - which is generally consider core to Marxism, and being a Marxist. Which is what the page's title is suggesting they were, which is why I have an issue with the title.
source 7, once again, presents Frankfurt School theorists in opposition to "orthodox Marxism", not as anti-Marxist.
I never said they were anti-Marxists, I said they weren't Political Marxists as the page title suggests. Source 7 is use to note that they're more appropriately called Critical Theorists, which is a step away from Marxism.
source 9 doesn't present any opinion that I can see on whether the Frankfurt School was or wasn't Marxist.
It says they dropped working class politics? Which again, is a pretty core aspect of the philosophy known as Marxism. Sorry I feel like I'm taking crazy pills here - we're both talking about Marxism right? You do know, what that is correct? It's just between you saying, it doesn't involve economic class politics, and now saying it doesn't involve working class politics.... it just seems like you're ignoring the fundamental tenants of what Marxism is - in order to present some idea that anything can be Marxist? (except Hoggart)... so I really don't know what you think qualifies. Perhaps you're leaning towards Andrew Brietbart's statement that it's all about "oppressor vs oppressed" dynamics and they can be applied anywhere with any meaning anyone decides. Which I'd suggest, is more post-modern than Marxist.
source 11 doesn't identify the Frankfurt School as non-Marxist or anti-Marxist, though it does have something to say about the opposition between these scholars and Soviet Communism.
It's about them veering away from conventional Marxism.
Anyways, it seems you have your own personal and very unorthodox understanding of what the word Marxism means. You've not offered to change the page to Neo-Marxist cultural analysis for instance. So yeah, your definition of "Marxism" (just that single word) doesn't seem to correspond to any sources, other than your own personal WP:OR opinion. When you remove class politics, and economic politics, and working class politics from having any relation to the word - you're steadily approaching absurdism. Which would explain attempting to erase Hoggart from The Birmingham School. It's all just a bit ridiculous don't you think?
I certainly wouldn't characterize it as reasonable. I'd suggest you maybe even take a step back and think about some of what I've said above. 117.102.138.58 (talk) 06:26, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
I don't have my own personal and very unorthodox understanding of what the word Marxism means - to define it I would start, for example, with what Leszek Kolakowski means by the term.
You are the one bringing in a priori assumptions (seemingly from an undergraduate course in Sociology), assumptions that don't apply to the topic of this article. If you don't understand what Orthodox Marxism means, read Kolakowsli - that really isn't a me problem. If you think Neo-Marxism isn't Marxism, read Frederic Jameson - again, not a me problem. If you think Marxism has to involve working class politics, then there are many Marxisms that you don't understand, and that is once again not a me problem. If you think Marxism has to rely on economic class analysis then, depending on what is meant by "economic", you may just have excluded Gramsci from Marxism - again, not a me problem. If you think Marxism can be equated with conventional Marxism then you don't understand what this literature is trying to say - really not a me problem.
To put it simply, IP, you have assembled a list of sources that don't exclude these various figures and schools from Marxism - the sources don't say these aren't Marxists - and you then interptet the sources as supporting your "personal understanding" that they aren't Marxists, because of your own priors. On Misplaced Pages we call that kind of mental operation WP:SYNTH, and we aren't allowed to do that.
As far as you're not here to WP:BUILD and accurate encyclopedia (sic.) - That's an unsubstantiated WP:ASPERSION and personal attack - don't do that. This isn't the article on The Birmingham School - if the sources shown that one thread of that school is influenced primarily by Marx and Gramsci and another thread isn't, then one thread belongs in this article and the other does not. That isn't revisionism; it's simple plain-eyed vision, based on sources. Newimpartial (talk) 12:45, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
because of your own priors mother fucker, you don't know jack shit about my priors. 117.102.150.254 (talk) 10:35, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
But yes, obviously Marxism gets called something else when it has less of a focus on economics, class, and the defense of the working class. Which is exactly why we have terms like Neo-Marxism and Post-Marxism (which are more accurately describe the current theorists listed on the page).
Which as I've said to you repeatedly, is the very reason why The Frankfurt School theorists became known as Critical Theorists, rather than Marxists.
Your lack of basic comprehension is the issue here. I've provided sources in line with what I'm saying. You have not. I've suggest a mid-way compromise (Neo-Marxist cultural analysis) you have ignored this.
This is not a me problem. It's a YOU problem, and YOUR failure to WP:LISTEN, and to make assumptions about me instead. End of story. 117.102.150.254 (talk) 11:01, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
The IP's lack of civility is certainly a them problem, and is verging on becoming disruptive IMO.
IP, you seem to believe that neo-Marxism isn't a kind of Marxism. No sources presented here support this. The sources you've provided are only in line with what you're saying if the reader assumes what you assume, e.g., that "Marxist" refers to a politics and not social theory, that "neo-Marxist" and "Marxist" are mutually exclusive, etc. The RS you've cited here don't actually do any of this work for you. When we have a choice between what sources actually say and what editors fervently believe, we have to follow the sources. Newimpartial (talk) 11:19, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
Yes, another editor has already noted the "abusive" tone of the IP. The only reason I haven't said anything myself is because I'm involved and because accusations of incivility are expressly discouraged by the civility policy itself.
This is also count three of editors (you and me) explicitly expressing concerns about unnecessary disruption. This is the point at which admins seriously consider blocks/bans without additional notice.
If anyone wants to involve another party, I would support that. My suggestion, however, would be that we both just walk away. If the IP takes this as license to sabotage the article, that will be very easy to correct. (If they change tune, however, and are willing to make improvements without revising the basic topic of the article that would of course be most welcome. Editing Misplaced Pages is not an all-or-nothing endeavor.)
Oh, and IP, you might want to consider striking the comment addressing another editor as a "mother fucker". It really makes you look bad.
Cheers, Patrick (talk) 14:42, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
Scholars who take "Marxist principles as a key influence/guide" are generally described by the adjective "Marxist". This doesn't by itself align them with an particular political platform if that is your concern. There's plenty of room for internal diversity. Patrick (talk) 16:23, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
Not in Sociology, the term would at best be "Marxian" - and only in reference to ideas that are explicitly stated as Marxist. They're usually just called Sociologists, or as sources above note: Critical Theorists. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 19:17, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
This is a nonsense argument. In mainstream scholarship, "Marxian" and "Marxisant" are strains of "Marxist", not mutually exclusive categories. And "Critical Theorist" was applied to the Frankfurt School as a retronym, not as a result of them being "not Marxist enough".
As far as your list of sources goes, IP, the only quality sources you listed are nuancing the relationship between various later thinkers and prior Marxisms, not creating a mutual opposition. The only ones doing that are the poor/sectarian sources.
To be clear, not all Critical Theorists are Marxist, and not all Cultural Studies scholars are Marxist. But the first generation of the Frankfurt School and the golden generation of the Birmingham School definitely are - according to the sources. And so are the Marxist Humanists that you so conveniently ignore. Newimpartial (talk) 20:11, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
This is a nonsense argument. In mainstream scholarship, "Marxian" and "Marxisant" are strains of "Marxist"
In mainstream POLITICAL sources, YES. In mainstream SOCIOLOGY sources, NO. Because Marx's politics is considered divorced from his Sociology (a discipline he was one of the 5 founders of, Comte, Marx, Spencer, Weber, Durkheim). Because as I've said above, Sociology, is not a politics. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 20:28, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
This distinction between Marx's Politics and Sociology seems tangential to this article, which is about the analysis of culture. Also, the mental operation on behalf of the disciplinary organization of knowledge that vivisects Marx and places part of his brain into a "sociologist" jar, stacked alongside the similar-sized jars for Weber and Durkheim - well, fortunately, that isn't an approach followed by the sources used in this article (or reliable recent sources in general IMO). Newimpartial (talk) 14:01, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
This distinction between Marx's Politics and Sociology seems tangential to this article, which is about the analysis of culture.
No it's not, Marx didn't spend a lot of time on the analysis of culture (beyond defining base and super structure) so once again, you're attempting to put your claims that "Marxist" is the best summation of the theorists listed is placed on a completely false argument.
Of course SOCIOLOGY is relevant to the page when most of the authors listed were SOCIOLOGISTS, and at best NEO-MARXISTS. Your persistent demand they be described as "MARXISTS" is based on JACK SHIT. You've provided NOTHING to say the current title is the best description, other than your own want to control (WP:OWN) the page, and gatekeep what happens here - all without presenting any sources, or doing any sort of encouragement of a WP:GOODFAITH approach. 117.102.150.254 (talk) 11:05, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
Oh! I didn't know that—and I bet a lot of readers don't either. Do you have a source so we could add it to the article? In the humanities, the Frankfurt School (or at least the first generation) are consistently termed "Marxists". If the social sciences employ a different vocabulary, that would be nice to include. Patrick (talk) 20:14, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
Not really, as it's more just understood within Sociology. There's this - but it's not specific to The Frankfurt School's sociology in particular. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 20:31, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
I think what I'm picking up on , is just the general vibe that isms, and ists, are political... whereas ians (eg. Wikipedians) are attempts at being apolitical or located more in theory that ideology. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 20:46, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
What about something from Marxist sociology and its sources? Addressing any disciplinary issues in the article seems like a better solution than trying to decide here who does or does not really count as Marxist. Patrick (talk) 21:55, 14 November 2024 (UTC)
seems like a better solution than trying to decide here who does or does not really count as Marxist. I would go one step further, and suggest - maybe we shouldn't be fabricating a category here at all. Maybe we should just call them Critical Theorists, like the rest of academia does. 101.115.128.217 (talk) 04:36, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
Using the term "Critical Theorist" wouldn't be going "further". It would be replacing "Marxist" with a separate, but overlapping, category to which the Frankfurt School also belongs. It's not clear to me how this would be helpful. Some critical theorists, such as Foucault, were not Marxists.
I'll say again that I'd be happy to see you build out the coverage of Gramsci or to add material on the specifically sociological terminology and its significance.
Otherwise, I'm concerned that this conversation has veered too far away from how to improve the article. Patrick (talk) 21:24, 15 November 2024 (UTC)
Foucault wasn't a Critical Theorist, he's a post modernist (he notes on page 119 of this interview that he hadn't found The Frankfurt School until late in life).
In the most genuine sense, only the first generation of The Frankfurt School are Critical Theorists, that's then stemmed out a bit further to the second and third generations (which is why people like Habermas and Nancy Fraser also adopt the term) - people outside of that are "choosing" to call themselves that rather than having a necessary connection to the school of thought.
I'm trying to improve the article because I don't think the writers/thinkers listed (with the exception of Gramsci) are particularly focused on Marxism. Nor do I think there's a reasonable justification for turning this page into a WP:Coatrack for Marxist theorists - which is obviously something that is going to happen if the current name is retained. It's called custodianship. If you don't get the categories correct, you face WP:Coatrack issues down the line. This is part of being here to WP:BUILD and encyclopedia, rather than using Misplaced Pages to do whatever we like. As @NewImpartial has said elsewhere, we have to follow the sources. 101.115.147.34 (talk) 01:53, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
Your essentialist definitions are at odds with massive amounts of scholarship in the humanities.
If they represent mainstream sociological practice (or really anything non-fringe), please add a section to that effect. It would be a space within the article where you could make many of the points you've made on this talk page.
Otherwise, arguing at length against acknowledged consensus to change the established topic of the article is simply disruptive. It wastes the time of other editors and does not contribute to building a better encyclopedia. Thank-you for not edit warring, but this is still not cool.
I'm going to give Newimpartial a barnstar for their patience in actually going through, and responding individually, to way more sources than would ever be necessary to establish basic facts (and not for the first time). Patrick (talk) 17:44, 16 November 2024 (UTC)
Your essentialist definitions are at odds with massive amounts of scholarship in the humanities. No the scholarship (as I've provided with sources above) says they weren't Political Marxists.
There's a fundamental difference between you and NewImpartial saying that "we've addressed all that" or "the scholarship disagrees" - and what backs my argument; which is a wide range of reliable sources, ranging from peer reviewed journal articles, to books, to The Director of the Ernst Bloch Institute, to The New Left Review. All of which are very credible, all of which say specific things (which I'm quoting) stating their turn away from Marxism.
Also, I don't care who you give out Barnstars/Goldstars to. I don't care about your special relationship, you don't have to tell me you're doing these things. 117.102.138.58 (talk) 06:04, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
To get a sense of what figures and what ideas are generally considered Marxist, I suggest conferring with even just a few TOCs of any general introductions or anthologies of the history of Marxist thought.
If your views are representative of any more broadly held in sociology, please by all means do add this to the article. It would also be fine to qualify the Marxism of the various figures presented here. They don't all agree about everything, and there is room for additional nuance.
We are not, however, going to purge the article everyone who flunks your arbitrary purity test, which so far appears to be complete OR.
Otherwise, once again, you are simply being disruptive, and I would ask you to please stop. Patrick (talk) 15:29, 17 November 2024 (UTC)
No, providing sources is not arbitrary... and no, tables of contents, aren't a good measure of anything. 117.102.150.254 (talk) 10:36, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
If you aren't content looking at inclusion in anthologies, I have already suggested which monograph authors you ought to read, to understand the topic. Newimpartial (talk) 11:07, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
Sorry you've mistakenly assumed the authority to give out reading assignments as if that's the issue. The issue is that the title isn't appropriate for the content (for the specific and current list of authors), and there are better options (and I've presented sources to that end). You'll have dream of being a lecturer or running your own book club elsewhere using some other WP:FORUM. 117.102.150.254 (talk) 11:30, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
They kinda' are, actually—although of course it would be much better to actually go on and read the books (or at least the relevant sections).
Kołakowski, for instance, is great, but it's also over a thousand pages...
Also, I think at this point you may want to review WP:ONEAGAINSTMANY. Patrick (talk) 13:08, 19 November 2024 (UTC)


Article topic and scope

While the above discussion was about whether the Frankfurt School can be described as Marxist, issues were also raised about the article's topic and scope.

In my understanding, members of the Frankfurt School said that while Marx had study economics under capitalism, they would study culture under capitalism. This became known as cultural analysis or critical theory.

How does this article differ in scope from cultural analysis?

Part of the reason for this article was to explain the reality that was misrepresented in the cultural Marxism conspiracy theory. But the conspiracy theorists have a much larger group, including unrelated topics for example Rudy Dutschke, political correctness and identity politics. I wonder how much this article appears as a rebuttal.

We should identify reliable sources for the scope of this article. TFD (talk) 18:38, 19 November 2024 (UTC)

I second this motion.
For my part, I have been understanding "Marxist" to include anyone standardly covered under that heading in introductory overview sources or academic histories. To me, this seems unimpeachable, and I don't understand why we're arguing about it.
The scope of "cultural analysis", however, is less clear.
I was introduced to much of the material covered in this article in undergrad courses in cultural studies, literary theory, and art criticism, and I have been orienting myself against this background. But we should be able to do better than this. I have no specific vision for the article and would welcome anything more precise. In particular, it would be nice to open the body of the article with a "Definition" section establishing scope explicitly on the basis of high-quality sources. Right now, it feels like editors (including myself) are somewhat adrift and too much just associating on the article title.
One thing I suggest we eliminate at the onset is any reference to the supposed "original intention" motivating the creation of the article vis-à-vis that idiot conspiracy theory. This has no basis in Misplaced Pages policy or, to the best of my knowledge, any of the relevant scholarly literature. Absent support from high-quality overview sources, I would support removing that material from the article entirely. It's an entirely separate topic that already has its own article.
Cheers, Patrick (talk) 19:17, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
The article's current lead section offers six citations for this sentence, The tradition of Marxist cultural analysis has also been referred to as "cultural Marxism", and "Marxist cultural theory", in reference to Marxist ideas about culture. While that may represent an OVERCITE situation, I have no doubt that the sentence is accurate (as an "also referred to", though not as an "ever primarily referred to"). Some of these sources are of high quality. As a result, I believe the sentence in question meets the test of WP:DUE.
As far as the scope of this article in general is concerned, one convenient (albeit partial) account of the relevant thinkers and themes appears in this article (with which I have no affiliation or conflict of interest). Newimpartial (talk) 20:41, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
Could those citations in the lead be distributed more discursively and, ideally, be attached to individual sentences or short paragraphs to produce a "Definition" section? I hope I'm not being too persnickety, but the lead is supposed to summarize the contents of the article, not stipulate them.
We could also use this section to define Marxism as it is related to this topic. It wouldn't have occurred to me that this would be necessary, but it's a fair demand that could be easily accommodated with the support of any of a great variety of sources.
Could you email me the article you link? I don't seem to be able to access it through the Misplaced Pages Library. It shows up in my search, but still appears as locked.
In any case, adopting a little more of a general "cultural studies" frame seems like a promising strategy, especially since we already have more specialized articles on Marxist aesthetics and Marxist literary theory (however lame they currently are). Patrick (talk) 21:19, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for sending the article. I fully support its use as a base for the framing of this article. Although not familiar with the author, his CV is plenty impressive. What quibbles I have are not relevant in this context. The views expressed are, to the best of my knowledge, largely uncontroversial among experts in the field.
Is what you sent me what is freely available here? If so, I think we can probably just cite to that. It has a few grammatical and typographical errors, but nothing that interferes with meaning. Patrick (talk) 20:58, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
To answer your question: yes, that's the version I sent. Newimpartial (talk) 21:00, 20 November 2024 (UTC)
Yeah, agreed we certainly don't want to be setting up articles to be debating with each other, although I don't think anyone is really trying to do that. Also, we have a ton of, let's say, "adjacent" articles to this one, like Western Marxism. I have no idea or opinion about whether or how they should be merged or reorganized.
I'm sure we can find a bajillion sources that at least sorta link FS to "Marxism". e.g. our article on Herbert Marcuse talks about his Marxist scholarship, etc.
Maybe we should clarify that "Marxist" doesn't mean "stuff Marx said"? It's weird, but if the sources call it "Marxist" maybe that's the best we can do. We do have "sociological analysis and interpretation of the areas of social-relation that Marx did not discuss" (emph. mine), but maybe we could be more clear? Would that address the complaint? ErikHaugen (talk | contribs) 20:47, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
We have at least one editor, operating under constantly shifting Australian IP addresses, who does argue with reference to the alleged intent of the article's creation (including somewhere above). Even in the event they go away, however, removing treatment of the conspiracy theory in this article might help to prevent others from raising this bogus issue.
Absent objections, I will do this myself on the grounds that it is a separate topic not covered by RS on the topic of this article.
Oh, and the massive amount of overlapping content on Misplaced Pages (or at least philosophy Misplaced Pages) drives me crazy as well. I've given up on any sort of general solution, however, just because of the vast amounts of time it would take to fix it—even assuming agreement among the editors involved. Patrick (talk) 21:33, 19 November 2024 (UTC)
The references to the four sources for the existence of "Marxist cultural analysis" are unspecific. The fourth source for example merely says, "there are neo-Marxian models of cultural studies ranging from the Frankfurt School to Althusserian paradigms." (Douglas Kellner, "Cultural Studies and Social Theory: A Critical Intervention." That could be the scope of the article, but we should show that there are sources about it, rather than just sources referring to it.
Some editors, if I am correct, think the scope of the article should be anything that Marxists said about culture. That would be broader than the scope in Kellner. But to do that, we would need to show there was a body of literature about the topic, not just isolated articles about what different Marxists wrote about culture.
Also, we might consider treating the article as a "History of." TFD (talk) 15:09, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
To be clear: the reason I pointed to the sentence with the six cites is because they document the use of "cultural Marxism" as a lesser synonym for the tradition of Marxist cultural analysis, not as the best evidence that the tradition exists or how it is defined.
For the latter, I would go with the many anthologies of Marxist writings about culture over the years, as well as such articles as the 2018 piece by Artz, which I linked above. Newimpartial (talk) 15:42, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
I think that reorienting the topic of the article as an area of specialization in the interdisciplinary the field of Cultural Studies would be a good idea. Cultural Studies is something in which you can pursue a PhD—and actually attain a professorship when you're done with the degree. It's not clear to me that this is true of "Cultural Analysis".
Further, Marxism is a recognized AOS in the field (for non-academics, Area Of Specialization: the top line of your CV – you only get one area — and what appears on the department website). Patrick (talk) 22:50, 21 November 2024 (UTC)
Here's a link to the full article that Newimpartial mentioned: Lee Artz, Traditions in Cultural Studies (2018). Can we use that as a source for guide for the scope of the article, per WP:TERTIARY?
We can also consider renaming the article, since the current title may be misleading. TFD (talk) 09:03, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I support this. I would also support changing the title of the article to "Marxist cultural studies" if others also think that would be a minor improvement. Seriously do not want to argue about it though. Patrick (talk) 16:38, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
What about "Marxism and cultural studies?" The scope could then be the relationship between Marxism/Marxists and the creation and development of cultural studies as described by writers such as Artz. TFD (talk) 20:27, 22 November 2024 (UTC)
That seems like the correct scope. What would be the advantage of that title? Most of our other articles follow the convention of "Marxist ". Patrick (talk) 17:35, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
There is currently more variety than this in article titles: Marxist sociology and Marxian economics, but also Political Marxism and Marxism and religion. Newimpartial (talk) 18:31, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
Okay. "Marxist cultural studies" sounds more natural to me, but I don't have any principled objection to "Marxism and cultural studies" if others prefer it. Patrick (talk) 18:40, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
Sorry to crop up again, but:
>"Dennis Dworkin writes that "a critical moment" in the beginning of cultural studies as a field was when Richard Hoggart used the term in 1964 in founding the Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCCS) at the University of Birmingham." Cultural studies#British cultural studies.
I don't know, but perhaps that's why "Marxism and cultural studies" was being suggested, because whilst the two relate that doesn't mean Marxism has a solid claim to having done cultural studies before it was a field. Making that claim by synthesizing a "Marxist cultural studies" that includes The Frankfurt School, would be WP:OR.
Some Marxist scholars may have been involved in pre-cursors to cultural studies, such as Critical Theory, but that does not mean there was a Marxist cultural studies going on (because the field didn't exist yet). Saying that would be traveling back in time (to before it was a field) and creating it before Hoggart et al. You're all running into the exact problem we had with cultural Marxism as a term to begin with. It was never defined because of what you're all facing now. It's at best "a bunch of Freudo-Marxists that cropped up just before The New Left and cultural studies". Which is a pretty loose idea for an article.
Cultural studies is critical of the social and economic frameworks culture is created within. But it is not innately Marxist as a field. 117.102.138.201 (talk) 23:53, 23 November 2024 (UTC)
If the title were "Marxism and cultural studies" that would clearly and naturally include pre-Birmingham work on clulture by Gramsci, Benjamin and the Frankfurt School, because (1) cultural studies is in the first instance the study of culture, not the name of a discipline; and (2) the historiography produced about Marxist approaches within the eventual discipline also typically begins with the generation of Gramsci and Lukacs, if not earlier. This field of discourse is neither limited to Freudo-Marxism (though I still prefer Frodo-Marxism as a term) nor does it involve WP:OR (or time travel) to define its boundaries. So regardless of the title chosen, the scope of the article will be following what the RS literature in the field actually says. Newimpartial (talk) 00:28, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
I would push back against point (1) a bit because I think the existence of Marxism as a major tradition within the institutionally recognized discipline of cultural studies is part of what legitimizes this article as more than just a conjunction of terms.
Point (2), however, is correct, and I would have thought it uncontroversial. But since it apparently is not, I have added material to the article directly supporting the Frankfurt School and Gramsci as part of cultural studies. Patrick (talk) 18:50, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
Apparently you're incorrect @Newimpartial, as is the Cultural Studies page, and Cultural Studies was actually started by one Karl "Satan" Marx (because he's behind everything)... and it started in 1859. Which I couldn't confirm was in the Lee Artz article.
.....and apparently that section of the sighted source reads:

Marxism — The Collected Works of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels comprises some 50 volumes. Arguably, however, the most influential texts for cultural study have been the shortest: the three-page Theses on Feuerbach and the five-page 1859 Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (see BASE AND SUPERSTRUCTURE). Further important texts include

Particularly if the article is to be about Marxism and cultural studies - a field of academic discourse. Not just any application of Marxism to culture. But also; if we're saying Marxism doesn't have a definition - then doesn't that justify the Cultural Marxism conspiracy theory? Because Marxism could be anything! Which is now something we're saying in Wikivoice, because of one single source? Seriously. This doesn't seem odd to anyone else? 101.115.134.142 (talk) 04:06, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
Does this contain a proposal to improve the article? If so, what are your proposing? Newimpartial (talk) 11:05, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
Yes, the removal of the erroneous text from the page:

The most influential texts for cultural studies are (arguably) the "Thesis on Feuerbach" and the 1859 Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy.

... as it's making a false claim about cultural studies, and using an obvious weasel word "arguably" to make this claim. 101.115.134.142 (talk) 10:20, 30 November 2024 (UTC)
Expert scholars and self-identified Marxists disagree about the definition of "Marxism". In no way, however, does it follow that anything goes. Please just edit the article to add whatever additional nuance you deem appropriate and we'll WP:CYCLE if necessary. Patrick (talk) 18:30, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
It doesn't matter if experts disagree on the definition of Marxism. TFD (talk) 19:45, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
It matters in that it means that we Misplaced Pages editors should be not wasting one another's time trying to decide what is or is not authentically Marxist. According to HQRSs, the experts disagree. Were it not for the debate here, it would not have occurred to me to say this explicitly. For it is hardly unusual, especially for a political term. But if you think mention of the existence of internal divisions within Marxism does not belong in the article, please just take it out. Patrick (talk) 20:50, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
I said elsewhere,"we could use Artz's article or similar ones to determine what exactly should be mentioned in the article and what should not...Making it about anything Marxist that remotely touches on culture is a violation of synthesis and weight." There is no reason whatsoever for us as editors to define Marxism,to know what it is or to determine who is or is not Marxist if we rely on sources about the influence of Marxism on cultural studies. TFD (talk) 21:29, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
I’m not sure where we disagree then. Please by all means edit the article directly if my contributions appear misguided. Patrick (talk) 23:52, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
You think that defining Marxism presents a problem for this article. I disagree. TFD (talk) 14:18, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
I interpret the IP editor as disputing the content (and title) of this article based on an a priori definition of "Marxist" that they happen to hold, which is external to the sources on this article's topic. I believe that you (TFD), Patrick and I all disagree with the various criticisms and proposals the IP editor has made based on their assumptions about "Marxism". I feel that our three positions are broadly in ageeement with each other, though we would doubtless each formulate our specific position using our own preferred language. Newimpartial (talk) 18:05, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
I agree.
Also, TFD, to clarify: I do not think the article should define Marxism except in the most general way. You can see my effort, sourced to HQRSs on the topic of the article, in the short section I added. I welcome improvements.
It would also be appropriate in some cases to more narrowly classify some figures as particular types of Marxists (e.g., Hegelian, humanist, structuralist) in sections on those figures, but I do not think this article is the right place to go into such classificatory schemes in detail.
Oh, and does anyone remember the markup to shift this thread back to the left with a little line and arrow? It has to be almost impossible to read on some screens. Or possibly (I hope!) we've exhausted the topic and at least provisionally arrived at an acceptable consensus? In that case, it wouldn't matter.
Happy Thanksgiving to everyone reading from the U.S.!
Cheers, Patrick (talk) 19:02, 28 November 2024 (UTC)
Hi, would you mind answering the question I posed at one of your past talk pages? That is, "Have you ever edited Misplaced Pages with a user account? If so, would you mind sharing the username—or at least the reason(s) you no longer sign in to edit?" Patrick (talk) 15:35, 24 November 2024 (UTC)
Oh dear, the local stasi wants to see my papers. Sorry, you'll have to get a bigger Barnstar. 101.115.149.250 (talk) 09:05, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
On this page, a little over a month ago, you counseled another IP editor to get an account, and you did this from your IP address.
It's clear you know what you're doing, and to me it appears to be a violation of WP:SCRUTINY and WP:RUNAWAY. If there is a reason for your practice other than to skirt the basic norms of accountability, civility, and collaboration, however, I want to be sure that you have the opportunity to share it.
If you acknowledged the existence of a stable usertalk page, I would be posting this there. Feel free to respond on my talk page if that seems more appropriate. Patrick (talk) 13:34, 1 December 2024 (UTC)

Cultural Study vs Cultural Studies.

Just to try to nip this in the bud for the 1000s time. @The Four Deuces, @Newimpartial, @Patrick Welsh. Are you saying this page is about anything Marxist that remotely touches on culture (as Patrick currently has it). So any "study of culture" that mentions or includes, or touches on an element of Marxism, or anything that can be said about those two things together....

...or is it about the academic field that started in the 1960s, as per the Cultural Studies article? 101.115.134.142 (talk) 04:17, 27 November 2024 (UTC)

I'm saying that the page is about what the RS secondary literature says the topic is about: namely, the Marxist tradition of studies of culture (which antedates Birmingham by two generations or so). That isn't as inclusive as "any cultural study that mentions Marx", but it also isn't as restrictive as "only the tradition emerging from Birmingham".
More importantly, the article's scope should follow how the HQRS define the topic. And I don't see anything from Patrick supporting the "all mentions of Marxism and culture" version of the scope - that seems to be a misreading on your part. Newimpartial (talk) 11:10, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
Making it about anything Marxist that remotely touches on culture is a violation of synthesis and weight. Policy however allows articles about where experts have pointed out connections. Per WP:TERTIARY, we could use Artz's article or similar ones to determine what exactly should be mentioned in the article and what should not.
So our story begins with Communists who say that while historically Marxists studied capitalist economics, they would study culture under capitalism. Then we would explain what elements of Marxist theory continued to significantly influence cultural studies and which elements were abandoned. TFD (talk) 17:51, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
What Newimpartial said.
The reason I supported the addition of Trotsky, for instance, was that he is included in an anthology on Marxist literary theory and was assigned reading in a semniar I took on that topic. These are the sort of terms upon which the article should be edited.
While I do not follow this article as closely as you, I have not observed a problem of editors just tacking on people or ideas not that do not receive significant coverage in relevant secondary literature.
If you can improve the article, please just do. I'm generally very pro-talk page, but whatever's going on here is out-of-control.
Also, for the fourth time, why to you refuse to edit under your username? Patrick (talk) 18:25, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
One of the sources used says, "This article highlights several specific concepts in Trotsky’s Literature and Revolution (1923) which exerted decisive formative influence on critical theory." The claim is questionable and I would only include Trotsky if the claim was routinely made and also explain what that influence was. TFD (talk) 19:39, 27 November 2024 (UTC)
As per my comment here @The Four Deuces, we're also currently saying that Marxism "has no official definition" - because someone said it didn't (which isn't WP:DUE, plenty of sources offer definitions of Marxism regardless of this non-sense idea that those definitions aren't valid because they're not "official" enough). At the same time we're using weasel words to say that "cultural study" - in the amorphous WP:SYNTH sense, can "arguably" be said to have started in 1859 with one specific Marxist text. All this WP:OR has been added by Patrick.
It's part of this desire some have for the page to force a focus on Marxism, rather than what more reliable or high quality sources say about The Frankfurt School, The Birmingham School, or cultural studies. It's quite ridiculous (although slightly better than when it had a section for Leon Trotsky and a stub-section for Marxism–Leninism).
Really I need someone other than just myself to aid in pointing out when the consensus of high quality sources is being violated, there needs to be a community to actually care about defining the scope of the article so it's a little more constrained by reality. Right now it still feels like certain people want to secure the page as to be a WP:Soapbox for a certain kind of severely undue praise of Marxism, as if we're not talking about Neo-Marxists and Post-Marxists who historically, are recognized as having made the New Left's turn away from traditional Marxist rhetoric. Of course, despite being offered ample sourcing, this is something that the adversarial editors (who trade in Barn-stars) have denied ever happened.
To those editors I'd just like to ask: What happened to Truth. We can't all be stuck in the 1950s viewpoint that people like Billy Bragg might represent. That's just Marxist phantasmagoria at this point. 101.115.149.250 (talk) 09:04, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
The definition section is distracting. If readers want to know about Marxism, they should just click on the link. "Cultural studies" is a term referring to a specific tradition and is not about studying culture in general. So Trotsky who was a Marxist and wrote about culture is outside the scope of the article and currently not included. TFD (talk) 10:23, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
Well, now I regret using Trotsky as an example. To the best of my non-expert knowledge, he's a borderline case, who, if included, would probably be best categorized as a precursor of some kind. I personally do not care at all if we treat him here. If I did, I would have restored the sourced content added by another editor.
I disagree, however, that a "Definition" section is a distraction, and if that's how the current version reads, that means it needs improvement, not removal. Readers should not have to rely on Wikilinks to grasp the basic topic of the article. There are other ways to do this, however, and I would not object if someone reframed the first section as a more historically organized "Overview" or something else along those lines. Patrick (talk) 13:24, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
The article should be about the Marxist influence on cultural studies. Cultural studies refers to an academic field pioneered by the Frankfurt School and continuing today. We should take the word of people writing about the connection who is or was a Marxist and what the influence was.
Terms should only be explained if they are Technical language. Isn't it obvious that anyone reading an article about Marxism and cultural studies would have an idea about what Marxism is? Even if you wanted to explain it, it would be complex because of the breadth of his writing and different traditions that have followed it. Besides, when we explain what cultural studies owe to Marxism, we are explaining those ascpects of Marxism that are relevant to the article.
You say that, "The term "Marxism" encompasses multiple "overlapping and antagonistic traditions"...and it does not have any authoritative definition." That's true for any ideological or belief system and in fact most concepts in social sciences. But Misplaced Pages articles don't routinely explain terminology used in articles. TFD (talk) 04:45, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
If any of the sources used are not representative of this field of study and research, please either remove them (together with any claims that depend upon them) or else add appropriate qualification(s) to the article according to your own best judgment. Do also remove any information about Marxism not relevant to the topic. Readers, though, should be assumed to be broadly ignorant of what this topic is. That's why most of them are here.
Describing the topic of an article in a general way is a good thing to do for even non-technical articles. "Marxism", however, is a technical term. Unless one has read the scholarship, one probably does not know what it means—even if one thinks one does. Furthermore, some people who have read some of the scholarship, such as our IP editor, define the term differently than the figures covered in this article, who also differ among themselves. Such differences merit explicit acknowledgement and explanation.
The current version leaves plenty of room for improvement. But we do need a definition section—whatever we might call it in the header. Edit boldly.
I apologize for the tone, but I find much of the discussion here to be extremely frustrating. It feels like some of the folks here are mostly engaged in a separate argument unrelated to improving this article. (This is not at all specific to you, and I understand that I am implicated as well.)
Regards, Patrick (talk) 17:27, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
Gramsci btw was the leader of the Italian Communist Party. I don't see why there would be any need for qualification to call him a Marxist. TFD (talk) 04:51, 2 December 2024 (UTC)
IP, I think you ought to read WP:NOTTRUTH. We don't deal in Truth on Misplaced Pages; we rely on what good sources say. And when good sources talk about Marxist analysis and culture, they count Western Marxism and Neo-Marxism as Marxist, rather than defining Marxism as traditional Marxist rhetoric and wanting to label "Gramscian" everything in the Western Marxism and Critical Theory traditions - a proposed change to this article's title that I believe you endorsed. That just ain't what the literature do.
You have never pointed out a consensus of high-quality sources endorsing your view, either. Instead, you have offered tendentious readings of arbitrarily selected sources; and even those sources don't support your view unless the reader carries the prior assumption that later Marxisms aren't "really" Marxist and then reads the sources with that in mind. To the mainstream scholarly tradition (represented e.g. by Kolakowski), these 20th century traditions are Marxisms. You don't get to create your own alternative facts just because you dispute the scholarly consensus on this. Newimpartial (talk) 13:22, 1 December 2024 (UTC)
This isn't a page about the history of Marxism in general—neither in the intellectual realm, nor in the political. It's also not the place for us editors to pass judgment on the tradition. If you spot any WP:PEACOCK terms or inappropriate WP:EDITORIALIZING, please simply remove the offending adjectives or rewrite or remove the sentence as appropriate.
If you can improve the article by more carefully defining the relationships of the figures covered to Marx's own ideas (or to the USSR or other states, as sources determine appropriate), please do. Patrick (talk) 14:29, 1 December 2024 (UTC)

Article title

There earlier appeared to be some consensus for changing the title of this article to either "Marxist cultural studies" or "Marxism and cultural studies". My preference is for the former, but I would also be fine with the latter.

Shall we proceed with this? I think either would be a small improvement, but I don't want to cause a ruckus if there is not, actually, a general consensus.

Also, in keeping with my issues with the current title, I have nominated cultural analysis for deletion. Please do weigh in if you feel this is a mistake.

Thanks, Patrick (talk) 20:33, 4 December 2024 (UTC)

The role in cultural and social topics.

The original 2014 version of this article had the following passage:

"An outgrowth of Western Marxism (especially from Antonio Gramsci and the Frankfurt School) and finding popularity in the 1960s as cultural studies, cultural Marxism argues that what appear as traditional cultural phenomena intrinsic to Western society, for instance the drive for individual acquisition associated with capitalism, nationalism, the nuclear family, gender roles, race and other forms of cultural identity;

reference: ^ a b Merquior, J.G. (1986). Western Marxism, University of California Press/Paladin Books, ISBN 0586084541"

so, could we add the topic of the Marxist Cultural Analysis that it does not stop at being just anti-capitalist but also critiques traditional societal norms in culture? the source is from the university of california from 1986, before the 1990s so it's not refering to the conspiracy theory when it refers to the marxist cultural analyis as "cultural marxism" but the original 1973 definition of the term. 177.37.150.39 (talk) 17:18, 24 December 2024 (UTC)

Can you quote the page no. where the source actually uses the term cultural Marxism? Just because the article used the terminal does not mean the source did. Also, what relevance is it if the term cultural Marxism was used? TFD (talk) 18:39, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
i mean, you could just replace "cultural marxism" with "marxist cultural analysis" and just call it a day. 177.37.150.39 (talk) 19:38, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
The article already says that. In fact, I don't know what is inherently anti-capitalist about it. They were basically criticizing the same cultura as American conservatives do. TFD (talk) 21:06, 25 December 2024 (UTC)
No, american conservatives aren't attacking them from an anti capitalist or pro socialist perspective. like the frankfurt school 177.37.150.100 (talk) 21:25, 12 January 2025 (UTC)
The Frankfurt school did not oppose pornography etc. because it was capitalist, but because they saw it as demeaning and exploitive. Presumably, conservatives would agree. Their difference would be about why exploitation exists. A socialist would be more likely to attribute it to social systems, while a conservative would attribute it to human nature. TFD (talk) 17:36, 21 January 2025 (UTC)
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