Table Of ContentThe Real World of Ideology
HARVESTER PHILOSOPHY NOW 
General Editor: ROY EDGLEY, Professor of Philosophy, University of Sussex 
English-speaking philosophy since the Second World War has been dominated by 
linguistic analysis, the latest phase of the analytical movement started in the early 
years of the century. 
As our twentieth-century world has staggered from crisis to crisis, English- 
speaking philosophy in  particular  has submissively dwindled into a humble 
academic specialism on its own understanding, isolated from substantive issues in 
other  disciplines,  from  the  practical  problems  facing  society,  and  from 
contemporary Continental thought. 
The books in this series are united by discontent with this state of affairs. 
Convinced that the analytical movement has spent its momentum, its latest phase- 
perhaps its last -the series seeks in one way or another to push philosophy out of its 
ivory tower. 
1  Freedom and Liberation 
BENJAMIN GIBBS 
2  Hegel's Phenomenology: A Philosophical Introduction 
RICHARD NORMAN 
3  Art, An Enemy of the People 
ROGER TAYLOR 
4  Philosophy and Its Past 
JONATHAN REE, MICHAEL AYERS AND ADAM WESTOBY 
5  Ruling IUusions: Philosophy and the Social Order 
ANTHONY SKILLEN 
6  The Work of Same: Volume l : Search For Freedom 
ISTVAN MESZAROS 
7  The Work of Sartre: Volume 2: The Challenge of History 
ISTVAN MESZAROS 
8  The Possibility of Naturalism: A Philosophical Critique of the 
Contemporary Human Sciences 
ROY BHASKAR 
9  The Real World of Ideology 
JOE McCARNEY 
Forthcoming 
Hegel, Marx and Dialectic: A Debate 
RICHARD NORMAN AND SEAN SAYERS 
The Dialectic of Revolution 
CHRIS ARTHUR 
Science and Ideology 
ROY EDGLEY 
The Political Philosophy of Merleau-Ponty 
SONIA KRU KS 
Philosophical Ideologies 
ROY BHASKAR
The Real World 
of Ideology 
JOE McCARNEY 
Senior Lecturer in Philosophy, Polytechnic of the South Bank 
HARVIE  STER PRESS 
HUMA  ;P RES!  JERSEY
First published in Great Britain in 1980 by 
THE HARVESTER PRESS LIMITED 
Publishers: John Spiers and MargaretA . Boden 
16 Ship Street, Brighton, Sussex 
and in the USA by 
HUMANITIES PRESS INC., 
Atlantic Highlands, New Jersey W716 
0 Joe McCarney, 1980 
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data 
McCarney ,J oe 
The real world of ideology. -(Philosophy now; 9). 
1. Ideology  2.  Communism 
I. Title  11. Series 
145  B823.3 
ISBN 0-85527-8668 
0-85527-438 7 (pbk) 
Humanities Press Inc. 
lSBN 0-391-01704-7 
0-391-01705-5 (pbk) 
Printed and bound in Great Britain by 
Redwood Bum Limited, Trowbridge and Esher 
All rights reserved
CONTENTS 
Preface 
1.  Marx's Conception 
2.  The Burden of Social Theory 
3.  The Burden of Epistemology 
4.  Traditions in Marxism 
Notes 
Index
PREFACE 
This essay is a study of the treatment of ideology by Marxist 
thinkers. The topic has a life outside that context, and issues 
of great interest have been raised there. Nevertheless, there 
is a case for regarding its place within it as crucial for the 
debate  as  a  whole.  Marx  is  usually  acknowledged  as, 
historically, the most important influence in the field, with 
the  main  responsibility for  introducing  the  notion  into 
general intellectual currency. Moreover, his work continued 
to shape its fortunes thereafter, in that later writers have felt 
obliged to define their position in relation to what they take 
to be his, whether in order to support or attack it. This in 
itself, of course, would not justify yet another discussion ofa 
well-worn theme. For that one has to rely on a claim which 
the body of the essay will  seek to substantiate, that the 
character  of  the  Marxist  tradition  in  this  area  is  now 
generally misunderstood  by  friendly  and  hostile  com- 
mentators alike. The failure has a radical aspect: it is rooted 
in  a  mistaken  view  of  the  nature  of  the  conception  of 
ideology held by Marx and the classical Marxist thinkers. 
Hence, the first chapter will be concerned to explicate that 
conception. The next two chapters will pursue the argument 
in relation to the main lines of misconceived development in 
the later period. The final chapter will try to locate the theme 
of  ideology  within  the  overall  pattern  of  the  historical 
development of Marxist thought. 
There are some debts that should be acknowleged here. 
The first is to Dr Otto Newman, Head of the Department of 
Social Sciences, Polytechnic of  the South  Bank, for his 
consistent encouragement of this project, and in particular
for its practical expression in arranging the measure of relief 
from teaching responsibilities that facilitated its completion. 
My  thanks are due to a number of  colleagues for their 
co-operation in this, and most of all to Dick de Zoysa who 
had to bear the brunt of the inconvenience that resulted. I 
should like to add that it was the experience of planning and 
teaching a course with him that led to my serious interest in 
the questions discussed in this book 
I am indebted to Nick Worrall for confirming that the 
standard translations of  Lenin could be relied on to the 
extent I required. 
I am grateful most of all to Roy Edgely, General Editor of 
the  'Philosophy  Now'  series.  He  has  read  the  entire 
manuscript in draft, and his detailed comments have been 
very helpful in preparing the final version.  I also attach 
considerable importance to his interest in the project at an 
early and difficult stage of its development. 
Finally, I wish to record my sense of the incalculable debt 
I owe my  wife for her support throughout the period  of 
writing this book. 
JOE MCCARNEY
CHAPTER l 
MARX'S CONCEPTION 
SOMEp reliminary  remarks  should  be  made  about  the 
method of inquiry to be used in this chapter. The task of 
explicating Marx's view of ideology is one which, notori- 
ously, gets no  systematic attention  in his  own writings. 
Indeed, for all the use made of the concept there is little that 
may safely be taken even by way of oblique comment on its 
grammar. We are given a set of clues and left to discover the 
pattern for ourselves. Here is a central fact of his procedure, 
and one must come to terms with it. The reticence of the 
texts has to be respected as a true reflection of the nature of 
his  interests  in  this  area.  These  are  overwhelmingly 
conjunctural and instrumental, scarcely ever taking a turn 
towards analysis or general reflection. The problems that 
result will be familiar enough to students of what Antonio 
Gramsci has called 'a conception of the world which has 
never been systematically expounded by its founder'.  The 
l 
founder's treatment of ideology might have been designed to 
point up this description, and in the circumstances some 
degree of methodological austerity seems advisable. At any 
rate this discussion will concentrate initially on the explicit 
references to ideology and the ideological to be found in 
Marx's work: these are the primary clues that have to be 
fitted together. It will be assumed that where he wishes to 
use the concept he will generally be prepared to do so under 
its  own  name.  The  inquiry  will  then  be  directed  to 
reconstructing the principle of this usage. It will ask what it 
presupposes, what general assumptions it is shaped by and 
what view of the nature of ideology can best make sense of it. 
The decision to develop one's account of a concept on the
2  The Real World of Ideology 
basis  of  the  clear-cut  instances  of  its  use  may  seem 
uncontentious and indeed scarcely worth stating. In the case 
of most major thinkers this might well be so. It does not 
generally seem to occur to interpreters of Locke on 'primary 
and  secondary  qualities'  or  Wittgenstein  on  'family 
resemblance' to set about their task in any other way, and 
there is no reason why Marx should not be shown the same 
respect. The exegesis of his work has, nevertheless, its own 
distinctively  relaxed  traditions. The proposal  made here 
would in fact be hard to square with much of what currently 
passes for discussion of his views on ideology. The standard 
weakness  of  this  literature  is  an  insensitivity  to  its 
subject-matter, a failure to respond to the pressure of its 
concrete details. The varied ways in which the tendency 
manifests itself will be documented in the later cdurse of the 
discussion.  It  is  mentioned  here  to  lend  point  to  the 
suggestion that in this area a certain dryness may now be in 
order. Such an emphasis has its familiar risks of scholas- 
ticism  and  the  fetishism  of  the  quotation,  of  being 
overwhelmed by details or of treating them with a literalness 
that misses the spirit entirely. But no such fate is inevitable. 
It may help to bear in mind the rules of  method which 
Gramsci prescribed for himself in this kind of situation. He 
lays  due  stress  on  the  importance  of  what  he  calls 
'preliminary  detailed philological work'  to be carried out 
'with the most scrupulous accuracy, scientific honesty and 
intellectual loyalty and without ariy preconceptions, aprior- 
ism  or parti  pri~'.B~u t  the  advice  is  to  be  taken  in 
conjunction  with  the  later  warning:  'Search  for  the 
Leitmotiv,  for the rhythm of the thought as it develops, 
should  be  more  important  than  that  for  single  casual 
affirmations and isolated  aphorism^.'^ The guiding assump- 
tion of this discussion is that a sense of the Leitnzotiv is best 
developed out of attention to detail. It must be recognized, 
however,  that  unless  such  a  general  understanding  is 
achieved  all  the  preliminary  detailed  work  is  in  vain. 
Moreover, once established  it need  not be permanently
Description:In this study, Joseph McCarney aims to break away from contemporary Marxist critical attitudes to reinstate the coherence and continuity of classical Marxism. He argues that the character of traditional Marxist thought on Marxist ideology is now generally misconceived. The author claims that this mi