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Chapter Eight - Learning Marx by Doing: Class Analysis in an Emerging Zone of Global Horticulture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2022

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Summary

Abstract

The interior of North East Brazil has emerged over the last three decades as a fast-expanding zone of export grape production. Its growth is based upon fast-changing class relations. This chapter reflects upon the author's attempts to deploy Marxist class analysis to comprehend these dynamics. Illustrating the forces at work in the case and field-sites analysed, the chapter discusses a dual process of ‘learning Marx by doing’. First, it describes the author's process of learning how to move from abstract, static and structural conceptions of class relations, to dynamic and experiential ones, in order to decipher the region's social transformations. Second, it illustrates how field observations on the rising self-organisation of the export sector's labour force and its achievement of significant concessions from employers were informed by, but also informed, the author's understandings of capital– labour relations. The chapter also addresses the relevance of methods aimed at carefully mapping and recording field findings, as these greatly help in identifying key features of class and power in their concrete manifestations in given settings.

Introduction

The modern bourgeois society [] has simplified class antagonisms. Society as a whole is more and more splitting up into two great hostile camps, into two great classes directly facing each other – Bourgeoisie and Proletariat. (Marx and Engels 1969: 14)

This conception of class – of two ‘great classes directly facing each other’ – informed my early PhD research. Yet, after contact with empirical reality, I realised how it represents a theoretical abstraction that rarely exists in empirical reality. I found that really existing class relations are complex, dynamic and multistranded.

This chapter discusses processes of social transformation in North East Brazil's fast-expanding export grape sector and, interrelatedly, considers how they can be comprehended from a class-relational perspective by reflecting upon the author's fieldwork in the region during the 2000s. Part of this account entails a discussion of how, upon encountering and trying to decipher the region's social transformations, the author's conception of class itself underwent significant modification.

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Marx in the Field , pp. 103 - 116
Publisher: Anthem Press
Print publication year: 2021

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