Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Preface
- Part I: Theory and structural background
- Part II: Mobilization and collective action
- Prelude
- 4 Students: relentless revolutionaries
- 5 Clergy: actors with relative impunity
- 6 Workers: rebels with dual targets
- 7 Capitalists: reluctant rebels
- Part III: Outcomes and conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - Workers: rebels with dual targets
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of tables
- Preface
- Part I: Theory and structural background
- Part II: Mobilization and collective action
- Prelude
- 4 Students: relentless revolutionaries
- 5 Clergy: actors with relative impunity
- 6 Workers: rebels with dual targets
- 7 Capitalists: reluctant rebels
- Part III: Outcomes and conclusions
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Urban workers also participated in the insurgencies against the state in Iran, Nicaragua, and the Philippines. Any analysis of workers in revolutionary conflicts must take into account Karl Marx's theory of revolution. Marx's analysis focused primarily on class conflict and class struggle. He argued that workers' economic exploitation under advanced, industrial capitalism generated a common interest among the proletariat to oppose the capitalist system. Industrial workers, who were concentrated in large factories, Marx argued, would develop class consciousness and adopt radical political ideology. He maintained that with increased solidarity and organization, workers would, in time, rise up against capitalism, seize state power, and establish socialism. Although none of the three cases in this study can be considered advanced capitalist countries, the conflicts and struggles of workers were critical in the insurgencies and political developments of these countries. But Marx's class analysis could not accurately predict the outcome of the conflicts in the three cases studied here. As will be seen, workers' ideological transformation and radicalism may threaten privileged social classes and prevent coalition formation, which is significant to revolutions in the absence of military defeat or breakdown.
Located near the bottom rung of the stratification system in all three countries, workers saw their interests adversely affected by both the state and employers. As a result, workers had the potential to target both the state and the capitalist class.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- States, Ideologies, and Social RevolutionsA Comparative Analysis of Iran, Nicaragua, and the Philippines, pp. 162 - 196Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000