Similar words: marxism, marx, karl marx, exist, sexist, coexist, preexist, existing. Meaning: ['mɑːksɪst] n. 1. an advocate of Marxism 2. emotionally charged terms used to refer to extreme radicals or revolutionaries. adj. following the ideas of Marx and Engels.
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121 Since this approach is not clearly within mainstream Marxist explanations, it is not analysed in detail here.
122 This type of simplistic explanation of primitive societies has dogged Marxist anthropology since Engels's time.
123 His was the first attempt to explain Stalinism as an aberration through the forms of Marxist analysis itself.
124 Political explanations Radical feminist and Marxist feminist interpretations of the education system have focused less on attitudes and more on power structures.
125 At the other end of the political spectrum from the new classical school are the various Marxist schools.
126 There are, of course,(sentence dictionary) profound disagreements between Marxist and elite writers as to the causal factors generating this phenomena.
127 A Marxist writer would probably identify this group as the first stirrings of a black petit bourgeoisie.
128 He argues that Marxist accounts assume that the phenomenon occurs solely due to the needs of corporations and their owners.
129 He seems to be very much part of the Marxist school in his approach to politics.
130 In summary, the key to understanding society from a Marxist perspective involves an analysis of the infrastructure.
131 By the early nineties a significant proportion of young radicals had adopted Marxist ideas.
132 Though conservatives were still attempting to thwart change, he said, central planning and other outmoded Marxist practices had been scrapped.
133 The Leninist theory of capitalist expansionism is generally considered to be the orthodox Marxist position.
134 The revitalization of critique was central in the re-emergence of significant variety in Marxist thought.
135 This discussion is informed by Marxist efforts to explain articulating modes of production in terms of the changing requirements of capital accumulation.
136 According to the Marxist view of bureaucracy, this is indeed the case in capitalist systems.
137 Marxist theory, in particular, has been subjected to an intense critical scrutiny, from which it has emerged considerably changed.
138 Locality studies can not, therefore, afford to insist on simplifying and monocausal assumptions such as those often made by Marxist analysis.
139 Such an approach treads a thin line between the traditional pluralist and Marxist divide in media studies.
140 And I heard remarkable stories of distinguished Marxist academics at other schools who flat out refused to teach undergraduate courses.
141 So far there is little here that would run counter to what would be considered orthodox Marxist views.
142 This reorientation of social thought, in new circumstances, has also influenced Marxist thinkers.
143 As Ramon comments, Marxist views are not approached as merely theoretical formulations but also as guidelines for action.
144 For one thing, it proceeded from a peculiarly Marxist view of history as the conflict between capital and labour.
145 Habermas sought to develop an argument which introduced the individual actors within the political system to a Marxist account of the state.
146 In view of this, Marxist teaching can be seen as a kind of catalyst.
147 In addition to this, the bureaucratic leaderships do not facilitate bringing revolutionary Marxist educational mate rial to the ranks.
148 A Marxist or Freudian theory is so constructed that experience is sure to confirm it.
149 Lenin fought stubbornly for the purity of Marxist theory.
150 She's a convinced Marxist, Buddhist, etc.
More similar words: marxism, marx, karl marx, exist, sexist, coexist, preexist, existing, existent, taxi stand, non-existent, nonexistent, existence, nonexistence, in existence, existential, coexistence, existentialism, axis, y axis, z-axis, y-axis, x-axis, lexis, Nexis, sexism, praxis, bruxism, prophylaxis, anaphylaxis.