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Lecture 19 Sociology 621 WHAT IS IDEOLOGY? November 9, 2009 I. INTRODUCTION 1. Multiple uses of the term “Ideology”: There is a deep problem in the use of the word “ideology”. Several common associations: ! ideology as false ideas: ideology as the other of science ! ideology as systematized gestalts of beliefs: ideological vs chaotic ways of thinking ! ideology as a multidimensional concept mapping all socially-relevant aspects of subjectivity I do not have a fully elaborated proposal for the linkage between the terminological conventions and the conceptual field we are exploring. This will create more ambiguities than in some of our other discussions. But I will try to use the following convention: An Ideology = the reference is to a system of beliefs Ideological practices = reference is to the process of producing beliefs incorporated within subjectivity 2. Ideology and Other Aspects of Social Relations/Practices (recapitulation) 2.1 Ideology as a practice, contrasted with political and economic practice. economic practice = process of producing use values through the transformation of nature as a raw material. political practice = process of producing social relations through the transformation of social action as a raw material. ideological practice = process of producing conscious dimensions of subjectivity through the transformation of individual lived experience (raw material) into beliefs. Ideology = cognitive: content of thinking. cultural practices = process of producing the nonconscious dimensions of subjectivity: personality, dispositions. Cultural practices produce habitus. theoretical practice = process of producing knowledge of social relations through the transformation of ideology as a raw material.Lecture 19. What is Ideology? 2[Perhaps we can give specificity to religious practices in these terms: practices which produce existential meaningfulness, meaning-in-life: Marxism could constitute a religious practice in such terms. This might also underwrite a contrast between spiritual practice and religious practice -- religion as alienated spirituality] Example: Michael Burawoy’s analysis of the labor process. His argument = workers participate in their own exploitation actively -- that is, they consent to their own exploitation -- not by virtue of subjective orientation which they bring to the shop floor from outside (through socialization, etc.) but because of the forms of subjectivity that are produced through the forms of competition and conflict on the shop floor itself. The heart of his analysis is thus the actual social process through which given forms of subjective orientations are produced and reproduced through the daily practices within the labor process. 2.2 Once again: Type vs Dimension of practice: (1). Ideology in this sense should be seen as a dimension of practices rather than simply a type of practice. (2). When the ideological aspect of a practice is its central intentional goal, we can speak of an ideological practice: One can “do” ideology. Education is an ideological practice in this sense: the central task is transforming subjectivity, especially the cognitive aspects of subjectivity. (3). Ideology is a contradictory practice: the forms of subjectivity produced by ideological practices are never wholly integrative of capitalism, never purely functional. In Burawoy’s analysis while consent is produced, so is resistance/solidarity. The problem is to understand the material conditions for each and the balance between them. Ideological practice is thus a social process through which (conscious) subjectivity is formed through the real activities of people engaged in social relations in which what happens to them -- experiences -- are transformed into cognitive productsLecture 19. What is Ideology? 32.3 Ideology, Culture, Consciousness, Nonconsciousness In a simple way I link ideology Æ consciousness and culture Æ nonconsciousness. The basic idea can be illustrated if we look at gendered aspects of ideological and cultural practices: Patriarchal ideology = beliefs in the naturalness of the sexual division of labor, in the desirability of men doing aggressive competitive jobs and women, nurturing, emotional work Patriarchal culture = socialization of masculine and feminine attributes of personality differentially in men and women so that men are dispositionally more aggressive and women more nurturing Bourgeois ideology --> belief in the efficiency and of private enterprise and the justice of distributions generated by markets Bourgeois culture --> unconscious dispositions, habits, personality structures conditioned to participate effectively in markets and competitition A given, concrete practice -- disciplining a child, reading a book, etc. -- may contain both ideological and cultural aspects, of course. 2.4 Fundamental issue for the transformation of social relations = contradictions between ideological and cultural practices: many men believe in nonaggressive nurturance (ideology) even though they have been socialized as aggressive, non-nurturant personalities (culture). Changing ideas can lead to changes in behavior which result in changes in dispositions. This kind of contradiction is at the heart of Therborn’s analysis of ideology. II. THERBORN’S ANALYSIS 1. Basic Definitions: Goran Therborn takes off from Althusser’s central conceptualization of ideology as a subject-producing practice (Althusser referred to this as the way ideology interpellates social subjects, which essentially means hails them as subjects or identifies them as subjects). Therborn’s project is essentially to take the generic notion that ideology transforms individuals into subjects and develop it in ways that make possible the concrete historical investigation of ideology. While much of his analysis revolves around clarifying a host of conceptual distinctions -- and thus it reads a little like a dictionary in places -- the discussion is filled with more substantive theoretical propositions and analyses. The analysis revolves around four main objectives:Lecture 19. What is Ideology? 41. To generate a set of concepts which make possible the historical investigation of ideology. This implies moving from the level of abstraction of what Althusser called “ideology in general” to the level of “ideologies” but doing so in a way that draws on the more general


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