oktalist said:
Starke said:
Honestly, I'd step back, again, and point this out. Marxism, outside of the post Marx branches, which you seem to be conflating, is supposed to be a tool for analysis. You can analyze anything through that system, and you will get a "Marxist" interpretation back every time.
I still don't see how that contradicts what I'm saying. You are right that if you analyse anything through the lens of Marxism, you will get a Marxist analysis. I am saying that that is exactly the lens through which the movie analyses modern capitalism. (Albeit in a vague sense, just as with the Daoist and Nietzschean influences.)
The distinction is postmodernist, actually. You're looking at the Matrix as a Marxist critique, so that's what you see. It's valid in some strands, but it is almost certainly unintentional.
On that subject, the Nietzsche analysis carries over more into what we see, even in the first film; a system designed to prevent anyone from rising above it. I'm not saying they meant to crib from
Beyond Good and Evil either, both are external interpretations of the work.
As to Daoism? Yeah, that's not only next to explicit in the text, it fits very solidly with the general tone the film was going for. I can't say with absolute certainty whether the Wachoski brothers were looking for eastern mysticism or Star Wars when they were chasing the zeitgeist down with a butterfly net. But one of them is the intended reference. (And I personally suspect it was Star Wars... but, anyway.)
oktalist said:
If you wanted to say the film was a criticism of Stalinist governance, then maybe you'd have some traction, but simply saying it's Marxist is really disingenuous.
I'm saying it's a criticism of modern capitalism. Obviously Marx isn't around to criticise modern capitalism, but I hope you agree that there is such as thing as a Marxist critique of modern capitalism.
Ironically Marx actually holds up pretty well in analyzing modern capitalism. There are elements that he did not predict, such as the rise of labor unions, and the evolution of labor laws, but they don't fundamentally exist outside of his analytical system.
His predictions for "the future" were pretty far off because he didn't predict social and technological changes. But nothing in Marx's actual economic theories is really contradicted.
oktalist said:
It isn't at the intent of exploiting the proletariat, but rather in ensuring that no single individual rises above the others to remake the world.
That might be a theme explored in the later two "movies", but in the first movie all we see of that is at the end when Neo "sees" the Matrix in its true form, as scrolling green "code" rather than as a hyperreal simulation. It's not explicitly stated that he has gained this ability as a result of being "the One", it's left open as to whether everyone might have this latent ability. You could see this as a kind of Buddhist "enlightenment", or as a casting off of false consciousness (the term used by Marx to describe how the proletariat is made ignorant of its true situation).
Again, we're actually backtracking here. You're right about the green rain, it really could have the overtones of mystical enlightenment.
There's also, probably the beginnings of an argument here about the entire text of "throwing off your shackles, and see the world for what it is" as an allusion to Marx's predictions for the revolution. But, honestly, when you get right down to it, there isn't any particularly satisfying evidence to support this. At least not in the structure of the film itself.
oktalist said:
Again, the Soviet Union, even under Lenin's version of communism was a very far cry from anything Marx suggested.
I know that. I would never equate Bolshevism with Marxism. I'm starting to think you've made some basic misunderstanding about the original point I was trying to make.
Just saying, this is actually an argument that could be made pretty coherently.
oktalist said:
What you're suggesting is it's a critique of Stalinist governance, which, again, has a lot more merit.
We're getting side-tracked. That was merely a hypothetical suggestion that I made in order to counter Thaluikhain's argument. I'm really suggesting it's a critique of modern Western capitalism, as I have said all along.
Yeah, no, I'm just spit balling here. If you look at the Matrix as a critique of Soviet governance, it kinda works. Kind of.
You have the glorious revolution, the machines take over, and then begin inflicting the exact same misery on those who oppressed them before.
oktalist said:
Marx was, fundamentally trying to reconcile all of human history looking for a coherent system of economic analysis.
Well, that's not
all he did.
Actually, yes, it really kinda was.
Outside of a few bits here and there, the majority of his work focuses on analyzing history by looking at economic factors, or speculating on what that analysis suggested for the future. When you actually get into his predictions, he doesn't really spend a lot of time on the subject, and even less on what he hoped would come to pass after capitalism failed.
The irony is, as much as Marx is maligned by some circles, it's basically impossible to do historical analysis today without building off of Marx's work. This may sound like bullshit fanboyism, but he did actually change the way we tend to associate economic factors with events.
oktalist said:
When you're talking about "Marxism" as a whole, it gets really... well... useless to say it's all "Marxism".
I know. I should never have mentioned Marx. I admitted that already. I could easily have made the point I was trying to make without mentioning his name. Putting his name in just confused the issue.
I said that the Matrix alludes to a Marxist critique of modern capitalism. I could have just said that the Matrix alludes to a critique of modern capitalism.
Obviously Marx never lived to see modern post-war capitalism, so there's no such thing as
the Marxist critique of modern capitalism, but it would be nonsense to say that modern capitalism can't be subjected to Marxist critique.
Except, it really can be.
Marx never got the chance to critique it, but others certainly have. It's where some of the literature divided ultimately, but the last century hasn't fundamentally altered the nature of humanity in any meaningful way. Just looking out your window at the occupy movement should give you some hint that Marx is just as meaningful today as he was in 1900.
oktalist said:
EDIT: I'm sorry if I'm being a bit hard on you here, but you did start this off basically saying you knew what you were talking about, so in that range... yeah... If you want to get into some real meat of what is and isn't Marxism, I'm up for that
I don't mind. I just want to make sure you haven't misunderstood the very simple point I was trying to make in the first place.
Yeah, I understand what you're saying... I honestly do. It's just, when you actually look at Marx, it doesn't really apply. Can we tweak things to get something in the range of your idea? Sure. But simply saying "this is Marxist" is a bit disingenuous (both to Marx and to your argument, no offense.)
oktalist said:
but applying actual Marxist analysis to the Matrix isn't really very informative.
I'm not proposing to apply Marxist analysis to the Matrix. I'm making the claim that the Matrix is applying Marxist analysis to capitalism in the modern world.
Yeah, this is the chicken/egg thing. Is it the film's intent, or is it your interpretation of the film. I'm not really trying to say "
YOU'RE WRONG!", but it is an awkward fit. Which is, ironically where the Nietzsche thing came up originally, it's not the intent, but it is a better fit.