Marxist
literary criticism
Marxist literary criticism is a loose term describing literary
criticism informed by the philosophy or the politics of Marxism.
Its history is as long as Marxism itself, as both Karl Marx
and Friedrich Engels read widely (Marx had a great affection
for Shakespeare, as well as contemporary writings like the
work of his friend Heinrich Heine). In the twentieth century
many of the foremost writers of Marxist theory have also been
literary critics, from Georg Lukács to Fredric Jameson.
The simplest goals of Marxist literary criticism can include
an assessment of the political "tendency" of a literary
work, determining whether its social content or its literary
form are "progressive"; however, this is by no means
the only or the necessary goal. From Walter Benjamin to Fredric
Jameson, Marxist literary critics have also been concerned
with applying lessons drawn from the realm of aesthetics to
the realm of politics. Marxist criticism can be about identifying
the class struggle within a text.
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