From asking my reasons for fixating (I did not previously voice any objection to this term, but I am considering it, seeing the direction this is taking) on the working class to criticising me for not laying out the entire map of class relations. Doubtless, were I to tap into my deeply
lacking knowledge to try and answer all this, there would be a repeat accusation of veering from the topic. I do not intend this as a defensive accusation, I am only trying to dodge having to do this in this thread. I was asked earlier to put up a socialism thread, and I think I'd much rather do this here. It would not be so easy to dismiss class analysis so easy there as it is seemingly here.
Not to leave this as a simple deflection, I must more explicitly say that class delineation is not as easy as separating black from white. From workers with ownership through shares to employee-owned companies (what's it called now, Pendragon, that giant of this category?) to questions of managing being a source of surplus value or not - it is not trivial. Tomes have been dedicated to this by people much more capable than I am, which I can not stress enough. The fact that it is not neat does not, however, prevent us from trying to form a general understanding of where people fall based on their relation to production, to ownership of the means of production. The fact that an employee can own does not make a Marxist class analysis useless or outdated.
In the process of production, human beings work not only upon nature, but also upon one another. They produce only by working together in a specified manner and reciprocally exchanging their activities. In order to produce, they enter into definite connections and relations to one another, and only within these social connections and relations does their influence upon nature operate – i.e., does production take place.
These social relations between the producers, and the conditions under which they exchange their activities and share in the total act of production, will naturally vary according to the character of the means of production.
Here's where I snatched it from. The
glossary of Marxists.org -- they also explicitly reject the kind of class definition that Sheb offers while I am writing this post.
The notion of class, as it is used by Marxists, differs radically from the notion of class as used in bourgeois social theory. According to modern capitalist thinking, class is an abstract universal defined by the common attributes of its members (i.e., all who make less than $20,000 a year constitute a "lower" class); categories and conceptions that have an existence prior to and independent of the people who make up the class.
For dialectical materialism however, the notion of class includes the development of collective consciousness in a class – arising from the material basis of having in common relations to the labour process and the means of production.
As to the specific question of what is labour - I would not make a distinction between intellectual labour and manual labour for the purpose of deciding who is working class. A teacher is working class just as much as a longshoreman is, at least in this distinction, which I think is the same distinction that Karl Marx makes in his Capital, based on what little I've managed to read so far. To quote some more,
The wealth of those societies in which the capitalist mode of production prevails, presents itself as “an immense accumulation of commodities,” its unit being a single commodity. Our investigation must therefore begin with the analysis of a commodity. A commodity is, in the first place, an object outside us, a thing that by its properties satisfies human wants of some sort or another. The nature of such wants, whether, for instance, they spring from the stomach or from fancy, makes no difference. Neither are we here concerned to know how the object satisfies these wants, whether directly as means of subsistence, or indirectly as means of production.
Objective and subjective class on Wikipedia - objectively, the proletariat definitely exists. The subjective proletariat has been eroded, it has vanished from consciousness far and wide. This does not eradicate the objective class.
Charlie Post addressing the question and claim that the proletariat has been replaced by a "precariat"
To what extent does income level help us in analysing the similarity between a worker in Finland and a worker in Cambodia? They are both alienated from their labour, even while the Finnish worker probably makes a lot more money. Does income level mean that the worker becomes separate from class relations? It does not. Income level is one factor,
but it does not make class.