Origins of the Family: A Marxist Perspective

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  • Опубликовано: 14 дек 2024

Комментарии • 76

  • @saschahoupt6177
    @saschahoupt6177 Год назад +14

    This was a fantastic talk. Glad to have attended!

  • @AsifKhan-bv3iu
    @AsifKhan-bv3iu 7 дней назад

    You are a great teacher

  • @AsifKhan-bv3iu
    @AsifKhan-bv3iu 7 дней назад

    Fantastic presentation.

  • @Tehan123
    @Tehan123 9 месяцев назад +6

    Amazing talk! I have so many books to read now haha! Thank you for recording and uploading!

  • @B_Estes_Undegöetz
    @B_Estes_Undegöetz Год назад +14

    27:30 OMG! As a Canadian here familiar with the historic efforts of the government to disenculture the indigenous people of the country by way of the Residential School System … in this moment of the video it’s like the other damn shoe dropped for me. It was not so much the indigenous culture and religion that needed to be driven from the children (sinceCanada tolerated other religions and a wide variety of unorthodox Christian views too); most important would have been to remove this most “pernicious” view of all regarding family structure and matrilineal society within many of the native peoples’. Belief’s like those the professor just descend of the Innu go right to the heart of private property and it’s inheritance in a capitalist society. Views such as those of the Innu would destroy capitalism itself, or at the very least are antithetical to the way it was practiced in North America. No wonder the indigenous children were “re-educated” with such grim and vicious vigor and were punished so violently for expressing any of their old ways of social organization.
    Ugh.

    • @grahamt5924
      @grahamt5924 Год назад +2

      Natives fought each other over territory, and they had slavery.

    • @B_Estes_Undegöetz
      @B_Estes_Undegöetz Год назад +2

      @@grahamt5924 And your point is?
      Your claims, regardless of their truth value, which I do not want to argue with you, do not address my original comment.

    • @grahamt5924
      @grahamt5924 Год назад +1

      @J. A. I. Well, territory and slavery are a form of property. The only difference is that theirs is collectively owned. Surely, a society like that could be capatalist also. It can't be that a capatilist society can only be patriarchal.

    • @christinao9061
      @christinao9061 Год назад +3

      @@grahamt5924 Indigenous people were and are not monolithic. Pre-contact they were indeed developing in *the direction of* class society, and some Indigenous peoples had indeed developed slavery. None of this contradicts the Marxist analysis. In fact, it is perfectly in-keeping with it.

    • @knossos574
      @knossos574 Год назад +1

      Maybe somebody more knowledgeable on the subject could respond to Graham, but indigenous people did migrate to the Americas from the west, also from around the world apparently by ships even before the arrival of Spaniards. Over time peoples that originally migrated to the new world became exposed a little bit here and there to new things and ideas.
      The battles over territory, I don't think anyone is arguing that tribes anywhere lived together in harmony all the time, the focus here is on the emergence of private property within these clans, gens, tribes or what have you and this transformed relations between peoples, men and women in the times to come.
      Anyone can correct me on this if I'm wrong.

  • @Lincoln-k3e999
    @Lincoln-k3e999 2 месяца назад +4

    Slavery isn't always about "racism"

  • @chiraz-p2g
    @chiraz-p2g 8 месяцев назад +2

    Fantastic lecture ! thank you

  • @jaytsecan
    @jaytsecan 8 месяцев назад +1

    Fascinating discussion. Thank you!

  • @pierrehanna
    @pierrehanna Год назад +4

    Amazing lecture! Illuminating

  • @christinao9061
    @christinao9061 Год назад +6

    Great talk, makes me want to read more!

  • @heartdisease1
    @heartdisease1 Год назад +2

    What a fantastic talk, the closing words almost made me cry!

  • @aitnez
    @aitnez 10 месяцев назад +4

    that's amazing

  • @SapphicTwist
    @SapphicTwist 9 дней назад

    Good stuff, I think James Woodburn ("Egalitarian Societies") does the best job in setting up the transition from pre-surplus hunter-gatherer society to neolithic society, and i think Nancy Fraser ("Cannibal Capitalism") does the best job in pushing Marxist theory beyond its fixation with relations of production, which, after all, has a hard time getting us beyond China's "996" (work from 9am to 9pm, 6 days a week) developmental path.

  • @henryberrylowry9512
    @henryberrylowry9512 8 месяцев назад

    Engels was equally influenced by Jakob Bachofen' Muterrecht. I'm not sure there's an english translation, however it would be an interesting endeavor to both translate and go through that text.

  • @michaelzunenshine7120
    @michaelzunenshine7120 8 месяцев назад +1

    What is the name of the speaker?

  • @henryberrylowry9512
    @henryberrylowry9512 8 месяцев назад

    Was this at York?

  • @B_Estes_Undegöetz
    @B_Estes_Undegöetz Год назад +9

    A talk like this goes a long way toward explaining why our “conservative” politicians (whether they’re Republican, Conservative or what-have-you) act like they do around issues of gender identity. These “conservative” politicians (and their followers) are in reality just rabid ideological defenders of their own material economic power, based on the “sanctity” of private property, generational wealth, and our debt based economy within the neoliberal capitalist economic system we have permitted to proliferate and come to dominate the world’s democracies.
    All of this societal turmoil around “crisis of masculinity” we are hearing so much about these days is really just a discussion of how emotionally disturbing it is for the ruling class to have to consider what might occur to their system of wealth generation and hoarding if one of the main pillars upon which production of this wealth sits is removed.
    All that male anger and ennui you hear is amplified echos of rich men’s anxiety.

    • @m1951-j2u
      @m1951-j2u Год назад +2

      The copium in the comment^

    • @burnhamsghost8044
      @burnhamsghost8044 3 месяца назад +1

      You don’t deadlift do you?

    • @kimobrien.
      @kimobrien. 28 дней назад +1

      The inability to form families with children because of the crisis and decline of capitalism. The bosses seek to pay the lowest wages work us the longest hours at the fastest pace.

    • @burnhamsghost8044
      @burnhamsghost8044 28 дней назад +1

      @ the richer the country the fewer the children

    • @kimobrien.
      @kimobrien. 28 дней назад

      @@burnhamsghost8044 The richer the ruling class you mean. South Korea the capitalist miricle country has this as its biggest problem.

  • @Lincoln-k3e999
    @Lincoln-k3e999 2 месяца назад +1

    Is spending $100,000 to become your "true self" liberating? Is turning your own posterity into hazardous medical waste via "healthcare" liberating?

    • @paumuniz2330
      @paumuniz2330 14 дней назад

      Definition of liberty: "the power or scope to act as one pleases". By definiton, having the choice to operate your body as you wish is liberating. Restricting that would be the opposite, again, by definiton. You are confusing that with what you percieve to be absurdity.

    • @Lincoln-k3e999
      @Lincoln-k3e999 12 дней назад

      Mr Paumuniz ..Our 2020 Zombie Apocalypse was a result of individuals "acting as they please" this is why we have restrictions and laws etc.. an additional 10+ individuals including a Black child / Secoriea Turner RIP 🕊 lost their lives, they are no longer with us.
      If your choice involves harming another individual then restrictions are necessary. The governments job is to protect its citizens. When you legalize an injustice that turns individuals into hazardous medical waste then there's a problem. Unjust treatment = oppression, entering the womb to act out an injustice doesn't magically turn that injustice into "healthcare" ¿¿

  • @manoocgegr1364
    @manoocgegr1364 Год назад +8

    Love it. As always I believe marxists are very very good critics. Especially good critics of capitalism. The problem with them however is when they are in power they do worse than capitalism in terms of brutality (Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot …).

    • @kayjay5349
      @kayjay5349 Год назад +20

      The issue with this is that Stalin was a "communist" by name only. You can't change all the fundamental principles of Marxism, keep only the idea of the planned economy, then repackage your revised version of "revolution" as Marxist-Leninism and "Communism". Seeing as Mao's party modeled itself after the Stalinist regime, they weren't any better.
      If you want a better idea of what communists are really like when in power, look at what the Bolsheviks did in the first two years after the October Revolution in 1917. And read Lenin's "The State & Revolution".

    • @unicornlord6327
      @unicornlord6327 9 месяцев назад

      Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot weren't marxists

    • @ayuh8911
      @ayuh8911 8 месяцев назад

      Lmao capitalism is about to end the world, Buddy. Enjoy

    • @ayuh8911
      @ayuh8911 8 месяцев назад

      Capitalism literally destroying the world, bud.

    • @dcl32
      @dcl32 7 месяцев назад

      The death and destruction of the Post Soviet Republics at the hands of Yeltsin and Gorbachev was much worse than anything perpetrated under Stalin.

  • @SimplicitySingularity
    @SimplicitySingularity 21 день назад

    Even at 2.0 speed this garbage is difficult to get through.

  • @berserker4940
    @berserker4940 6 месяцев назад +3

    The patriarchal hierarchy is good

    • @SimplicitySingularity
      @SimplicitySingularity 21 день назад

      Yes, it is, and they know it, which is why they push homosexuality, not to free people from oppression, but to destroy straight males because they are the natural enemy to beta cucks who want to force people under their thumb, rather than earn the right to rule.
      They attack anything to do with merit based anything for this very reason. They lack any ability to uplift anyone, including themselves, which is why they mire in the sewer of marxism, and thus, they must people down, push them below themselves, so that they can now hold a position of power and control. Then the murdering begins.

  • @grahamt5924
    @grahamt5924 Год назад +3

    The exact number of people that were killed in the Russian Revolution is disputed amongst historians. The number ranges anywhere from 7 million to 12 million people killed between 1917 and 1923, most of them being civilians

    • @theswoletariat3479
      @theswoletariat3479 Год назад +11

      that was a civil war. the ruling class and foreign imperialists were responsible not the working class revolutionaries

    • @B_Estes_Undegöetz
      @B_Estes_Undegöetz Год назад

      Reactionary conservative aristocrats didn’t want to lose their Faberge Eggs, their massive land holdings, and their exclusive access to political power via the Czar and his organized crime family leadership group.
      So … like @theswoletariat ^ said up there.
      It was a civil war.
      And the aristocracy turned traitor and invited FOREIGN imperialist mercenaries into the country to fight a civil war against intellectuals, factory workers and peasants with the goal of stopping anyone who would dare introduce principles of egalitarian socialism into “their” “traditional valued” Russia.
      For example, US soldiers were still in Russia as late as 1922 killing Russians to defend the Russian aristocracy and US “interests” and trade relationships with the old Russian artistocrats. The British were still killing Russia s as late as 1920. France made a huge contribution of military force to keep the Czar in place. They didn’t leave until 1921.
      So … when you quote deaths due to the Russian Revolution it’s important to note that this was a civil war, and that much of the killing was done by massive foreign armies and mercenaries, invited into the country by a vicious aristocracy content to kill other Russians if it meant they could keep their goodies, land and power.

    • @kimobrien.
      @kimobrien. 28 дней назад

      @@theswoletariat3479 Forty million died as a result of the Imperialist slaughter of WW1. The Bolsheviks called peace with no annexations.

    • @SimplicitySingularity
      @SimplicitySingularity 21 день назад

      @@kimobrien. Every word you said is a distortion of reality. You are sick, get some help.