Marxoid
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]Marxoid (comparative more Marxoid, superlative most Marxoid)
- Having Marxist influences, but not truly Marxist.
- 1983, Law and politics in Aztec Texcoco, page xiv:
- The Aztecs have been “shown" to have been at one or another stage of various Marxoid evolutionary schemes by writers ostensibly using the same body of evidence.
- 1997, Robert Wilson, The Illuminati Papers, page 31:
- Farrell wasn't as good as the liberal-Marxoid critics of the '30s claimed, but he is good enough not to deserve the oblivion that has fallen upon him.
- 2014, Frederic L. Pryor, The Red and the Green: The Rise and Fall of Collectivized Agriculture in Marxist Regimes:
- I label these ideas “Marxoid,” because, although they were allegedly derived from Marx, they required additional assumptions; indeed, such Marxoid arguments might also be refuted with other arguments drawn from Marx.
- 2017, Angela Nagle, chapter 3, in Kill All Normies, Zero Books, →ISBN:
- Of all the Marxian and Marxoid schools of thought, Gramsci's is perhaps the most influential today, placing media and culture at the center of political analysis and praxis in a mediated age after the decline of the old labour movement.