Alienated Labor, By Karl Marx

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Karl Marx was born in Germany in 1818 into a middle-class family and completed several years of university education studying law, history, languages, and philosophy. After college, Marx began writing about labor conditions during an era of rapid industrialization. The year 1848 was the “Year of Revolutions” in Europe, as workers and ordinary people rose up against the ruling monarchies in Germany, Italy, Austria, Hungary, and France. He was later banned from Germany and the France for his revolutionary views. During his lifetime, capitalism began to expand, and in Marx’s view, it created inequality. He emphasized that capitalism and all existing societies are characterized by inequality. Under capitalism, a minority of capitalists, the bourgeoisie; who own and monopolize the means of production, accumulate profit based on the labor of employees. Capitalists use this profit to expand their ownership of private property while the property-less workers continue to toil for minimal wages, thus maintaining, as Marx argued, the ever-growing economic and social gap between capitalists and workers. …show more content…

It describes the estrangement of their beings as a consequence of living in a society of stratified social classes. The alienation from the self is the condition of social classes that estrange a person from their humanity. Within the capitalist mode of production, the worker loses the ability to determine life and destiny, the right to think of themselves as the director of their actions, the character of said actions, to define relationships with other people, and to own items of value produced by their labor. What he is saying is that work, at its best, is what makes us human. It allows us to live, be creative and flourish. One example is that many artists are workers who can craft their goods and there is a whole book about it called The Art of Happiness by the Dalai Lama and Howard C.

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