Marxist or historical materialist historiography is a school of historiography influenced by Marxism.
The chief tenets of Marxist historiography are the centrality of social class and economic
constraints in determining historical outcomes. Marxist historiography has made
contributions to the history of the working class,
oppressed nationalities, and the methodology of history from
below. The chief problematic aspect of Marxist historiography has
been an argument on the nature of history as determined or dialectical;
this can also be stated as the relative importance of subjective and objective factors in creating outcomes. Marxist
history is generally deterministic,
in that it posits a direction of history, towards an end state of history as classless human society. Marxist historiography,
that is, the writing of Marxist history in line with the given
historiographical principles, is generally seen as a tool. Historians who use
Marxist methodology, but disagree with the mainstream of Marxism, often
describe themselves as marxist historians (with a lowercase M). Methods from Marxist
historiography, such as class analysis, can be divorced from the liberatory
intent of Marxist historiography; such practitioners often refer to their work
as marxian or Marxian.Friedrich
Engels' most important historical contribution was Der deutsche Bauernkrieg (The German Peasants' War), which analysed
social warfare in early Protestant Germany in terms of emerging capitalist
classes. The German Peasants' War is over determined and lacks a
rigorous engagement with archival sources. It does however indicate the Marxist
interest in history from
below and class
analysis, and it attempts a dialectical analysis. Marx’s most important works
on social and political history include The Eighteenth Brumaire of Louis
Napoleon, The Communist Manifesto, and The German Ideology.Engels' short treatise The Condition
of the Working Class in England in 1844 (1870s) was salient in creating the socialist impetus in British politics from then
on, e.g. the Fabians
Society.Key to understanding Marxist
historiography is his view of labor. For Marx “historical reality is none other
than objectified labor, and all conditions of labor given by nature, including
the organic bodies of people, are merely preconditions and ‘disappearing moments’
of the labor process.”[1] This emphasis on the physical as the determining factor in
history represents a break from virtually all previous historians. Until Marx
developed his theory of historical materialism, the overarching determining
factor in the direction of history was some sort of divine agency. In Marx’s
view of history “God became a mere projection of human imagination” and more
importantly “a tool of oppression.” There was no more sense of divine direction
to be seen. History moved by the sheer force of human labor, and all theories
of divine nature were a concoction of the ruling powers to keep the working
people in check. For Marx, "The first historical act is the production of
material life itself." As one might expect, Marxist history
not only begins with labor, it ends in production: "history does not end
by being resolved into “self-consciousness” as “spirit of the spirit,” but that
in it at each stage there is found a material result: a sum of productive
forces, a historically created relation of individuals to nature and to one
another, which is handed down to each generation from its predecessor. For
further, and much more comprehensive, information on this topic, see historical
materialism. Marxist
historiography suffered in the Soviet Union, as the
government requested over determined historical writing. Soviet historians
tended to avoid contemporary history (history after 1905) where possible and
effort was predominantly directed at premodern history. As history was considered
to be a politicised academic discipline, historians limited their creative
output to avoid prosecution.Notable histories include
the Short Course History of the
Communist Party of the Soviet Union (Bolshevik),
published in the 1930s, which was written in order to justify the nature of
Bolshevik party life under Joseph Stalin.A circle of historians inside
the Communist Party of Great Britain (CPGB) formed in 1946. They shared a
common interest in "history from below" and class structure in early
capitalist society. While some members of the group (most notably Christopher Hill and E. P.
Thompson) left the CPGB after the 1956 Hungarian Revolution, the common
points of British Marxist historiography continued in their works. They placed
a great emphasis on the subjective determination of history. E. P. Thompson
famously engaged Althusser in The Poverty of Theory,
arguing that Althusser's theory overdetermined history, and left no space for
historical revolt by the oppressed.Thompson's The Making of the English Working
Class is one of the
works commonly associated with this group. Eric Hobsbawm's Bandits is another example of this group's
work.C. L. R.
James was also a great
pioneer of the 'history from below' approach. Living in Britain when he wrote
his most notable work The Black Jacobins (1938), he was an anti-Stalinist Marxist and so outside of the CPGB.
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