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Soldiers in Capitalist Society: Critique of the Labour of Political Violence

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Soldiers in Capitalist Society: Critique of the Labour of Political Violence
Abstract
This dissertation critiques the soldier in capitalist society as a category of social labour that produces the state capacity for political violence. Identifying soldiering labour is essential to historicizing how this social capacity of labouring people is fetishized as the military power of the state. From the perspective of this project, the substance of the labour of the soldier is affected but not resolved by a resolution of form (such as the standing army, or transition from a draft to an all-volunteer army). What is discovered through historical and theoretical analysis and soldiers’ struggles themselves, is that historical class struggles in the military can be read as contests for political sovereignty over the labour of political violence: literal power over cooperative labour, not merely over institutions, or freedom in the ‘spheres’ of politics and economics. It captures the necessity of emancipation in one as a condition of the emancipation of the other; and that of the soldier as a condition for everyone else’s so long as we are to be concerned with the entirety of human life and not the exception of a single nation-state’s population.
Type
Ph.D., Political Science
University
University of Toronto
Place
Toronto
Date
2025
# of Pages
219 pages
Accessed
12/9/25, 5:47 AM
Language
English
Citation
Chorley Foster, J. (2025). Soldiers in Capitalist Society: Critique of the Labour of Political Violence [Ph.D., Political Science, University of Toronto]. https://hdl.handle.net/1807/149965