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Class notes lecture 2 for soci 326

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These are detailed student notes for Lecture 2 of Political Sociology, covering the foundational theories of Karl Marx and Max Weber. The notes are rewritten in clear, simple language with examples and exam tips, making complex theories easier to understand. Topics included: Marx’s materialism and the role of the economic base in shaping society Dialectical change and stages of history (feudalism → capitalism → beyond) Marx’s theory of the state and class conflict Critiques of Marx and his lasting influence on sociology Weber’s three dimensions of inequality: class, status, and party Weber’s three types of authority: traditional, charismatic, and legal-rational Bureaucracy as the modern form of organization (efficiency vs. “iron cage”) Comparison of Marx’s and Weber’s approaches to power and inequality

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September 18, 2025
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Written in
2025/2026
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Matthew lange
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Lecture 2 – Marx & Weber
Karl Marx – The Basics
●​ Who he was: A 19th-century philosopher, journalist, and revolutionary thinker. He
wanted not just to understand society but to change it.​

●​ Main question: Why are societies unequal, and how does that inequality create
conflict and change?​


Exam tip: Be ready to explain why Marx is considered both a theorist and an activist — his
ideas were tied directly to a political project.


Materialism
●​ Core idea: The economy (how we produce and distribute goods) is the foundation of
society. Everything else — politics, law, culture, even religion — sits on top of this
“economic base.”​

●​ Implication: To understand why laws or governments work the way they do, look at
who controls wealth and production.​


Example: In capitalism, businesses (the bourgeoisie) own factories. Laws about property
protect them. Workers (the proletariat) have to sell their labor to survive.


Dialectical Change
●​ Dialectic (simple terms): Every system creates its own contradictions → these
contradictions clash → the clash produces a new system.​

●​ Marx’s version (Dialectical Materialism): It’s not ideas alone that clash, but material
interests (classes fighting over resources).​


Example:

●​ Feudalism had lords and peasants.​

●​ Contradiction: peasants wanted freedom + land, lords wanted control.​

●​ Result: the system collapsed → capitalism emerged.​
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