Thursday 30 September 2010

Marxist Criticism


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Marxist criticism

Marxism is not a viable theory. Communities societies which are based on the principles developed by Karl Marx (1818-1883) have been oligarchies in which a small group of leaders controls the money and the guns and forces it’s polices on a population kept in the line through physical pressure. Even if communist countries were true Marxist societies and even if all of them had failed, Marxist theory would still give a meaningful way to understand history and current events. One could use Marxist to interpret the failure of Marxist regimes.

Tuesday 7 September 2010


What is Structuralism?
Structuralism is the name that is given to a wide range of discourses that study underlying structures of signification. Signification occurs wherever there is a meaningful event or in the practise of some meaningful action. Hence the phrase, "signifying practices." A meaningful event might include any of following: writing or reading a text; getting married; having a discussion over a cup of coffee; a battle. Most (if not all) meaningful events involve either a document or an exchange that can be documented. This would be called a "text." Texts might include any of the following: a news broadcast; an advertisement; an edition of Shakespeare’s King Lear; the manual for my new washing machine; the wedding vows; a feature film. From the point of view of structuralism all texts, all meaningful events and all signifying practices can be analysed for their underlying structures. Such an analysis would reveal the patterns that characterise the system that makes such texts and practices possible. We cannot see a structure or a system per se. In fact it would be very awkward for us if we were aware at all times of the structures that make our signifying practices possible. Rather they remain unconscious but necessary aspects of our whole way of being what we are. Structuralism therefore promises to offer insights into what makes us the way we are

Friday 3 September 2010

Sociology/Anthropology (B. A. 1st Year)

History of Human Society and Culture:
Paleolithic
The first or the oldest pre-historical culture is known as Paleolithic or Old Stone Age. The word Paleolithic has come from the Greek word ‘Palaios’ meaning old and ‘lithos’ means stone. Paleolithic refers to the pre-history of mankind covering the period from the first appearance of tool using human until the emergence of Mesolithic stage. Paleolithic people lived as hunter-gatherers without agriculture and without formal pottery production. The Paleolithic has traditionally been subdivided into three successive phases, namely
1. Lower Paleolithic age
2. Middle Paleolithic age
3. Upper Paleolithic age

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