Tuesday, March 26, 2019
Essay --
SOCI 201A Professor HyslopFrancesca SurracoSocial Theory Final Exam excerpt 1 the doer is related to the product of his labor as to an exotic object the more the worker exhausts himself, the more indexful the alien orb of objects which he creates over and against himself becomes, the poorer he and his inner world become, the less thither is that belongs to him as his cause. - Marx (Kamenka p. 134).In this quote, Karl Marx discusses his theory of alienation. This quote describes how capitalist the worker becomes alienated from the products they make, which save alienates them from aspects of their human nature mostly collectible to friendly stratification (bourgeoisie and proletarians). Their alienated work becomes a routine, mechanical activity say by the bourgeoisie. The selected text in Kamenka this quote is from discusses the laws of political economy which canvas how the more wealth the worker produces the more his production increases in origin and scope. The poore r he becomes the more commodities the worker produces the cheaper a commodity he becomes. in that location was an example spoken in class, I believe of a blacksmith, which highlighted pre-capitalist works conditions. A blacksmith would own his own shop, set his own hours, determine his own working conditions, shape his own product, and have some say in how his product is bartered or sold. However, the proletariat under capitalism works in order to earn money to live. Despite the fact the worker puts their manners into the product they are alienated from their product that they no longer own. The capitalist has purchased the proletariats labor-power in exchange for exclusive ownership over the proletariats products and the profit make from the products. The pr... ...ident in this quote. In my personal opinion, I do believe Foucaults argument, that knowledge and power are interconnected, is indeed valid mostly due to the fact that his argument is still relevant in terms of the powe r relations present in our societys current institutions. This is exemplified by how the prison system is still run with heavy surveillance of prisoners eventide more so with the technological advances (Security cameras, computers for documentation and filing, etc) that have occurred since the time spot Foucault discusses. This quote ultimately reveals how members of society gain and maintain positions of power and further produce more knowledge by having knowledge, as exemplified by the penal system in our society discussed by Foucault.Work discussedFoucault, Michel. Discipline and penalise The Birth of the Prison. New York Pantheon, 1977. Print.
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