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Ok instead of substantiative criticism, which 'function' gave and seemed to ... slide right off, let's try rhetorical criticism
Imagine you're debating with a leftist. You - just as an example, no political analogy intended - assert something like 'conservatives are committed to equality in practice. and it's leftists who, despite their progressive religion, take action to harm equality at all times'. Your interlocutor says: "Many leftists took up the cause of equality long before conservatives did, predating them by centuries. Conservatives, indeed, fought equality tooth and nail, and conservative intellectual heroes were against equality - and they were the first to call themselves conservatives. Today's conservatives call themselves pro-equality, but it's all a facade".
Now, this may be true. Or it may not be. But - if you're reading this ... what can you conclude from it? Why can you believe it? Where is the evidence? The interlocutor is speaking to a conservative, who certainly believes conservatives are pro-"true equality, equality of opportunity" - and they are, at least at the moment - so they'll hear it, think "oh, but all the cons I know love equality", get mad, and move on. Instead - what are the names of those intellectuals, where can I read more about them, even by googling them? Maybe pull some excerpts from their wikipedia article? That'd be much more convincing - if you're arguing against someone who's lazy, you make sure they see the proof - and if they didn't know, it'll show that to them, viscerally. But that argument, or yours, can't actually convince anyone, because there's so little being said. Which authors who called themselves "cultural marxists"? Presumably you have specific authors in mind ... it'd have taken 5 seconds to write their names, and turn this from a bland statement to a statement of fact that's both researchable and contestable.
I have nothing against someone asking for a source, but please, drop the school teacher act, especially if your issues with me apply the same to the person I'm responding to.
Happy to oblige:
(...)
I've seen a lot of these sort of conversations, it doesn't work like that. Half the time what happens is they stop responding, and when the topic comes up again in the future, the conversation just resets.
So, your original statement was that "racism = prejudice + power" is "cultural marxism" because cultural marxism is "the idea that we live in an exploitative system, where people are divided into classes, one designated the oppressor, and the other the oppressed."
My claim was that the latter statement was extremely broad, and is held in various forms by many historical and present groups unrelated to marxism.
That's from your article. You'll notice that this doesn't directly mention 'enemy classes' at all. Clearly this phenomena - the cultural/social turn, the new left, frankfurt school, critical theory - are related in some ways to the modern left, wokes, progressives. Although it is worth noting they are correct about many things in some ways - things you might call right wing - they criticize the role of money and big business in perverting culture, popular media and music as a tool by those with power, alienation, the facileness of consumerism. But the ideas in the above paragraph are very different from a simple idea of 'enemy classes, not just economically. And they share similarities to the 'all girls can do what boys can', don't they - socially conditioned traits, gender roles, opposing hierarchy, and crucially liberation from oppression and restriction all things they have in common with "Races r the same", "girl can do what boy can do". Aside from the veneer of "lets all agree" vs "i very disagree", it's the same thing - universalism, progressivism, liberating the oppressed, etc.
Your original question was "what was specifically Marxist about class conflict" and that was the answer.
It's not extremely broad. There just aren't that many groups analyzing social relations through the lens of oppressor and oppressed classes. I'm pretty sure you will have a hard time finding a framework that does so, which is not descended from Marxism.
In plain language, what do you think this means:
You already claimed that what I said is extremely broad, even though it's very easy to follow. How would you react if I quoted this instead?
Why does the concern about statements being extremely broad, and is held in various forms by many historical and present groups unrelated to marxism, vanish when you happen to agree with them?
False. "I have a dream" and "girl can do what boy can do" allow racism and sexism to go both ways, while "patriarchy" and "racism = prejudice + power" hold only one group can be racist and/or sexist.
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