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What has been the general understanding about women’s emancipation under Marxian philosophy?

Political Science · Western Political Thought UGC NET November 2021 Political Science
Passage
Like in many other areas, even on the question of women Marx made Hegel his starting point. Hegel regarded women as inferior, with less reasoning ability, and saw the natural differences between men and women as immutable. Marx himself said little about the role and position of women; he took it for granted that socialism would bring about their emancipation. In The German Ideology and Capital he spoke of the natural and spontaneous division of labour within the family, where the first property relationship arose when the man treated his wife and children as his slaves and held power over their labour. Marx did not explain how this came about and did not focus his attention on the position of women. Engels, in The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State, gave a materialist account of the origins of patriarchy and linked the subordination of women to the rise of private property. In The Holy Family, Marx and Engels observed that the degree of emancipation of women could be used as a standard to measure general emancipation, a view Marx repeated in an 1868 letter to Dr. L. Kugelmann. In 1845, criticising Max Stirner, Marx warned against treating the family without regard to its specific historical setting, noting that the bourgeoisie had endowed the family with the character of the bourgeois family, whose ties were boredom and money.
What has been the general understanding about women's emancipation under Marxian philosophy?
ADue to class division, women got inferior status
BMarx did not analyse women's condition beyond socialism ✓ Correct
CMarx understood the women's position very correctly
DMen and women had equal status
Correct answer: (B) Marx did not analyse women's condition beyond socialism — The general understanding is that Marx did not analyse women's condition beyond assuming socialism would emancipate them, so the answer is the second option.
Explanation
The general understanding is that Marx did not analyse women's condition beyond assuming socialism would emancipate them, so the answer is the second option.
The passage says Marx said little about the role and position of women.
He took it for granted that socialism would automatically bring about their emancipation.
He did not focus his attention on the specific sources of women's subordination.
It was Engels, not Marx, who later gave a detailed materialist account of patriarchy.
So Marx's treatment of women is usually judged thin and subordinated to his general theory of class.

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