HONNETH, A. Moral Consciousness and Class Domination
HONNETH, A. Moral Consciousness and Class Domination
HONNETH, A. Moral Consciousness and Class Domination
Morality*
(AXEL HONNETH, 1981)
A central problem of the critical theory of society is the connection between normative
theoretical intention and historically situated morality. If a theory is to do more than merely appeal to
the ethical standards upon which its critique of society is based, then it must prove the existence of
empirically effective forms of morality with which it can reasonably connect. This problem seemed to
be solved, so long as the historical evidence of social class struggles seemed to demonstrate clearly
the existence of a social movement led by moral principles. The colapse of this original trust in
revolutionary Marxism is the key experience of the critical theory of the Frankfurt School; it now faces
the task of linking ethically founded norms and historically effective morality in a situation in which
a politically organized workers' movement has lost all empirical visibility in Germany.
Critical theory from Adorno to Marcuse interprets this historical fact as the result of the
complete integration of the industrial working class in the institutional framework of capitalist society.
The concepts of the "totally administrated world" or the "onedimensional society" represent attempts
to come to grips with this historical experience. Both Adorno and Marcuse are so strongly influenced
by the impression of a completely integrated capitalism that they seem no longer capable of imagining
a morality which arises from sociostructural conflicts; neither of them traces the normative
perspectives of his critique of society to an empirically effective morality. Adorno compensates the
lost hope of revolution in a philosophical aesthetic which views the work of art as the historically
definitive location of moral insights; Marcuse attempts to retrieve the lost hope of revolution
naturalistically by means of a Freudian instinct theory which supposes the currently effective source
of emancipatory action to lie in a socially impregnable reservoir of erotic drives. In both versions of
critical theory, the normative claim has thus become separated from the task of analyzing the normative
conflicts which are influential in contemporary society.
This well-known phase of the history of critical theory seems to have been overcome with
Habermas' reconstruction of historical materialism. Here the analysis of society is laid out in such a
way that the empirical force of a moral consciousness anchored in the reproductive process of the
species itself can be discovered in the deformations of late capitalism. This ambitious version of critical
theory employs a theory of evolution in which the process of sociocultural development is divided into
two dimensions of rationalization: a practical-moral and na instrumental-technical learning process.
This establishes the framework for an analysis of society which discovers in the structural conflicts of
a social system the signs of an historical movement in which the moral learning process of the species
persistently achieves expression. The basically Hegelian model of history, in which moral insights take
on the historically most productive function, determines the framework of the analysis of late
capitalism: in order to maintain the consistency of his fundamental evolutionary idea, Habermas is
required to analyze the normative capability for social change by identifying moralpractical knowledge
contents. His social theory suggests that today the normative learning process of the species has a new
carrier group in those social avantgardes which, in a climate of socio-economic well being, learn to
petition for the normative surplus of bourgeoise moral universalism and to work toward a
communicative ethic. Thus it is no longer experiences of economic dependence and social deprivation,
but rather the sensitivity to socially unrealized claims to justice, which in turn is linked with a well
organized process of socialization, which have now become the presupposition for a moral-practical
critique of society.
Habermas shares with Adorno and Marcuse the image of society which lies at the basis of this
thinking. The preservation of the late-capitalist social system has succeeded up to now because the
moral and practical interests of the wage-earning class can be materially compensated to a great extent
and diverted onto the track of private consumption; the normative potential of the working class seems
to be dried up by state intervention. The practical interest in a higher form of social justice is to be
located only in those socially privileged groups which seek a new social formation on the basis of an
ethically principled rejection of capitalist instrumentalization. Habermas therefore consistently
translates these hypotheses into a social-psychological crisis theory, in which the normative conflicts
of late capitalism have been displaced from the tension between social classes to the experience zones
of youthful protest-behavior. Thus it appears that this crisis theory, which is supposed to explain the
social roots of present-day normative conflict, has lost all connection with a theory of class conflict.
In what follows I do not wish to criticize this crisis theory directly; it can cite empirical evidence
all too easily at the moment. The issues which I would like to consider briefly here are located in the
conceptual approaches to the macro-sociological analysis of potentialities for critical normative action.
Since such a theoretical enterprise obviously depends upon the depth and clarity of the categories with
which social theory illuminates the normative and practical conflicts of its time, I will concentrate
upon this problem. How, I would like to ask, must the categories of social theory be constructed, so
that they can detect empirically effective forms of morality at all? My supposition is that Habermas'
theory of society, to which I will address myself here, is so constructed that it must systematically
ignore all forms of existing social critique which are not recognized by the political-hegemonical
public. I further suggest that, for this reason alone, Habermas is required to exclude the identification
of importante fields of contemporary moral conflict from his theory of capitalist class conflict. First, I
will attempt t o show that Habermas' notion of empirically effective ideas of morality does not pay
sufficient attention to class-specific forms for the expression and formulation of morality. In the second
step, I would like to show briefly that the way in which social feelings of injustice are manifested is
also dependent upon the degree of effectiveness of social control, in order to indicate, thirdly, the
consequence of these two considerations: that a field of moral-practical conflicts may lie hidden behind
the façade of latecapitalist integration, in which old class conflicts continue to take place either in
socially controlled or in highly individualized forms. These concluding remarks should be understood
as speculative suggestions which must still be translated into empirical research issues.
Habermas' theory, which is intended to establish the normative claims of a critical theory of
society on the basis of a procedural ethic of discourse, poses the problem of the historical and social
embeddedness of formal moral principles. 1 His conception leads to a solution in which the empirical
bearers of socially innovative moral principles are identified from the viewpoint of the ethical level of
their forms of moral consciousness and ideas of justice. I would like to concentrate upon this point of
connection between formal discourse ethics and empirically derived sociology of morals. My
supposition is that Habermas must implicitly ignore all those potentialities for moral action which may
not have reached the level of elaborated value judgments, but which are nonetheless persistently
embodied in culturally coded acts of collective protest or even in mere silent "moral disapproval" (Max
Weber).2 If it is correct, however, this supposition would have consequences for the way in which
Habermas delas with the moral and practical conflicts of the present day.
In order to bring out more clearly the distinction with which I wish to operate, I would like to
turn to recent attempts to write a social history of the plebeian masses ("crowds") and the industrial
proletariat.3 Here the crass discrepancy has been worked out between the normatively based ideas of
justice formulated in the culture of bourgeois experts and the political avant-garde, on the one hand,
and the situationally dependent, highly fragmentary social morality of the suppressed classes, on the
other. The leading moral ideas which accompany and support the social protest of peasants and urban
underclasses may thus be understood as the result of a mixture of these two differently generalized
value systems, as George Rudé has attempted to show:
Of these, the first is what I call the 'inherent', traditional element, a sort of 'mother's milk' ideology,
based on direct experience, oral tradition or folk-memory and not learned by listening to sermons or
speeches or reading books. In this fusion the second element is the stock of ideas and beliefs that are
'derived' or borrowed from others, often taking the form of a more structured system of ideas, political
or religious, such as the Rights of Man, Popular Sovereignty, Laissez-faire and the Sacred Right of
Property, Nationalism, Socialism, or the various versions of justification by Faith . . . there is no such
thing as a tabula rasa, or an empty tablet in the place of a mind on which new ideas may be grafted
where there were no ideas before. 4
It seems to me worthwhile to abstract this line of thought from its original context in
historiography and to apply it to the sociological analysis of potentialities for normative action. The
structure of unwritten and experience-bound moral perceptions from which the authentic social ethic
of the lower strata is constructed works like a cognitive filter through which hegemonial or dominance-
critical systems of norms are presented. While the normative systems which developed within the
culturally qualified strata contain self-consistent and logically connected ideas of right and wrong
which outline principles of a just social order from the fictive perspective of an observer outside
experience, the social ethic of the lower strata represents an uncoordinated complex of reactive
demands for justice. Thus, while elaborated ideas of justice undertake to provide active evaluations of
social situations within a relatively coherent system of relations, the unwritten social morality consists
of situationally bound condemnations of these social facts. Since these negative valuations are not
generalized into a positive system of principles of justice, I would like to suggest, in agreement with
Barrington Moore, the term "consciousness of injustice" as a name for their cognitive substrate. This
conception is intended to bring out the idea that the social ethic of the suppressed masses contains no
ideas of a total moral order or projections of a just society abstracted from particular situations, but is
instead a highly sensitive sensor for injuries to intuitively recognized moral claims.
It possesses, therefore, only an "inner morality" which is preserved in a complex of standards
for moral condemnation. This inner morality represents, so to speak, only the negative side of the
institutionalized moral order; its innovative, historically productive potential is that it points to
hegemonially excluded possibilities of justice with the force of life-historical outrage. However, these
implicit criteria of moral disapproval are not abstracted into a system of norms for action removed
from specific situations. Thus, when the social history of the working class concentrates upon
normative ideas in the daily life of the industrial proletariat, it is more likely to encounter securely
anchored feelings of injustice rather than clearly formulated, ethically grounded goals. The basic cause
of this is not the cognitive inferiority of the lower strata, but class-specific differences in normative
problem pressure: the moral problems with which social classes are confronted within their horizons
of action are located on different levels of generality. The conditions which I would like to put forward
as the causes for the different construction of the moral consciousness of socially suppressed groups
are therefore social-structural in character.
Personality theory also casts doubt upon the idea of argumentative consistency in daily moral
consciousness which we have from philosophical ethics and, in a certain sense, from Kohlberg's
developmental psychology. The acting subject is in principle emotionally too much tangled in the
situation to be evaluated, and has structured his or her social environment too richly with components
capable neither of moralization nor of strategic treatment for the supposition of the normality of
consistent moral consciousness to be meaningful at all. 5 Nonetheless, I think it is useful to search for
socio-structural conditions which leave the moral orientations of the members of social underclasses
untouched by institutional, and also by informal, demands for consistency. Preliminary, intuitive
considerations support the plausibility of such a supposition.
A coherent value system does not normally belong to the institutionally regulated parts of the
occupational roles available to members of oppressed social classes. Their occupational activity
challenges them seldom or not at all to develop even the most provisional overview of the social life-
and interest-structures of society as a whole. Thus, nothing is built into the daily routine of these social
strata which is anything like an institutional pressure to depersonalize one's own norms of action.
Secondly, a contribution to the moral dimension of social order is not customarily expected to result
from direct communication with the members of less or unqualified occupational groups; they are not
considered capable of developing a linguistic or cultural code for the solution of such problems.
Moreover, the general pressure to integrate one's own moral norms of action into a potentially testable,
consistently constructed system is very low for members of the socially lower strata. Michael Mann
thus suggests in an influential essay that "only those actually sharing in societal power need develop
consistent societal values."6 Two systematic arguments may be introduced which remove the character
of mere plausibility from this supposition:
(a)The members of the socially suppressed classes are subject to no social legitimation pressure. While
the members of the societally dominant class are generally required to normatively justify to
themselves and the other members of society the existing social order, from which they receive their
privileges, the dominated classes are not subject to this requirement. Although their social situation
also requires a system of cultural interpretation which renders experienced inequality explicable and
imposed burdens bearable, they nonetheless do not face the internal and external necessity of founding
the social facts which require justification upon a deductively constructed system of values based upon
a principle of justice. For the members of the socially lower strata, therefore, there is little pressure to
lay bare the norms of action which are valid for their life-world and to integrate them at least fictively
into a system of value premisses reaching beyond that world.
(b)The cultural climate of the socially suppressed classes does not include any pressure to elaborate
the normative convictions of its members. In addition to the completion of highly qualified training
programs, the social strata which participate in the exercise of political and economic power also
acquire a monopoly on the acquisition of a cultural tradition; 7 moreover, they possess, as Pierre
Bourdieu demonstrated, the symbolic means of decoding the ethical tradition which stimulates and
supports the embedding of their own norms of action in a system of values which does reach beyond
specific situations. At the same time, the cultural milieu of the dominant class awards premiums of
social recognition to the most complex and abstract presentation of normative convictions without
examining the power of these ethical self-portraits to provide action orientation. The cultural milieu of
the social underclasses certainly does not have a comparable potential to stimulate the elaboration of
its own value convictions; rather, its members are excluded from the possibility of ethical examination
or verbal stylization of their norms of action by the processes of cultural reproduction embodied in the
school system.8 This can be supported indirectly by empirical investigations which show that members
of the working class treat the moral problems of their own environment in a normatively secure and
ethically mature manner, but fall back helplessly upon standard normative clichés when they are asked
to deal with questions about the possible value principles of social orders in general.9
These two considerations, through which I have attempted to sketch the classspecific conditions
of the formulation of moral principles, make a generalized value system positively oriented to moral
norms appear to be rather improbable for socially suppressed strata and classes. Their moral claims
are preserved as consciousness of forms of injustice because the social class situation neither forces
nor supports their reflective elaboration and logical generalization. However, a concept which
undertakes to measure the normative potential of social groups on the basis of collective ideas of
injustice or forms of moral consciousness fails to grasp the implicit morality of such a consciousness
of injustice. Since neither its value premisses nor its ideas of justice are transparently clear, the inner
morality of the consciousness of social in-justice can be grasped only indirectly on the basis of
standards posed by the moral disapproval of social events and processes. From this perspective, a
number of social actions which seem at first glance to lack any normativepractical intent or direction
might possibly be recognized as forms of expression of the consciousness of social injustice. The
analysis of these is made more difficult, of course, by the simple fact that the ways in which they are
manifested are codetermined by both the degree of their political organization and the level of their
social control. I would like to concentrate upon this problem in the second section of the essay in order
to establish a linkage to the present situation.
II
I have attempted to show that in the case of socially suppressed strata, the ideas of justice
according to which social groups morally evaluate and judge a social order are more likely to be found
in typical perceptions of injustice than in positively formulated principles of value. The standards
governing moral disapproval of social processes are more reliable indicators of expectations for a just
and good social order than the often conventionalistic value system of the lower strata, which is seldom
ordered in a logically satisfying manner. If his consideration is correct, then there is a potential for
expectations of justice, need claims, and ideas of happiness preserved negatively in the consciousness
of injustice in these social groups, which for social-structural reasons do not reach the threshhold of
proposals for a just society. This argument contains a double abstraction, however: on the one hand, I
have abstracted from all processes in which either the suppressed groups themselves, or political avant-
gardes, culturally mobilize and strategically organize collective feelings of injustice in order to bring
them into political conflicts in the form of arguable justice claims; I have also abstracted, on the other
hand, from state or institutional processes which limit and control the opportunities both to formulate
perceptions of social injustice and to make them public in order to force them below the threshhold of
political articulation. This form of argument is intended to make clear that the ways in which feelings
of social injustice are presented are not subject to the free choice of the subjects involved, but are
influenced and codetermined by various mechanisms of class domination. The task common to these
processes of the social control of moral consciousness is to hinder the manifestation of feelings of
social injustice at such an early point that the consensus character of societal dominance is not
threatened. These techniques of control thus represent strategies for the maintenance of the cultural
hegemony of the socially dominant class by latently narrowing the possibilities of articulating
experiences of injustice.
In order to describe the mechanism of normative class dominance, I would like to attempt to
make a distinction between processes of cultural exclusion and processes of institutional
individualization. These processes of social control achieve their purpose by limiting either
possibilities of symbolic and semantic expression or the spatial and sociocultural conditions of class-
specific experiences of deprivation and injustice. The first process aims at desymbolization, the second
at the individualization of classspecific consciousness of injustice.
(a)Processes of cultural exclusion are those strategies which limit the articulation chances of
classspecific experiences of injustice by systematically withholding the appropriate linguistic and
symbolic means for their expression. 10 These strategies are applied through agencies of public
education, the media of the culture industry, or forums of political publicity. They weaken the ability
to articulate which is the basis of the successful thematization of the consciousness of social injustice.
I believe that, when used with caution, Foucault's discourse analysis could aid the discussion at this
point. In order to investigate ''procedures of exclusion,'' Foucault proceeds on the assumption that "one
does not have the right to say everything, that one cannot speak of everything at every opportunity,
that, finally, not just anyone can talk about just anything. Taboos of subject, rituals of circumstance,
superior rights of the speaking subjectthese are the three types of prohibition."11 Accepting for the
moment this threefold division for procedures of linguistic exclusion, we may discover three social
techniques for controlling the articulation of social injustice. The language system taught today by the
agencies of socialization and spread by the mass media so strictly formalizes and depersonalizes group-
and class-specific experiences of injustice that they remain completely external to the world of
communication. At the same time, situations of legitimate disapproval are specified, perhaps even
regulated by law, and the degrees of significance of moral speech are vertically stratifiedmoral
disapproval acquires greater public weight with increasing education. Yet precisely those sectors of
the horizon of individual experience which consist of class-specific deprivations and injuries are
thereby largely excluded from public discussion; even at the individual level they can be expressed
only with effort. Of course, this welldocumented process of desymbolization12 is also accompanied
by the institutionalized repression of cultural traditions and of the political learning processes of social
resistance movements. The degree to which the sym-bolic testimony of the history of the workers'
movement, for example, are excluded from the public arena in the Federal Republic of Germany is a
concrete example of such processes; this results in the drying up of a world of memoryladen symbols
and the destruction of continuity-founding traditions. Mechanisms of this sort may be understood as
components of cultural exclusion. They damage the linguistic and symbolic capabilities of individuals
and in this way block the articulation of social injustice.
(b) Processes of institutionalized individualization are all those strategies encouraged by the state or
ordered by other organizations which attempt to counteract the danger of communicative agreement
about group- and class-specific experiences of injustice by either directly requiring or providing long-
term support for individualistic action orientations. They destroy the communicative infrastructure
which is the basis of a cooperative mobilization and elaboration of feelings of injustice. The apparatus
for these strategies of individualization is exceedingly complex. It extends from social and political
rewards for individualistic risk-taking, to the administratively ordered destruction of neighborhood
living environments, to the establishment of competitive labor markets within the factory or office.
The ideology of achievement supported by the socializing institutions of the state, which promises to
make life chances dependente upon individual occupational success, reinforces this individualization.
The sociocultural effects of capitalist social policy are well documented. Although the state system of
social insurance has been able to considerably reduce the financial risks of wage earners, its legal
organization in the form of private insurance has hindered the development of alternative, collective
organizational forms and has even individualized the perception of risk. 13 To cite a second example,
the urban renewal of the postwar period has indeed improved the living situation of the working
population, but at the same time through the social intermixing in the new urban housing developments
and the architectural privatization of dwellings it has reduced the space(s) available for organizing
class specific public forums.14 According to my thesis, processes of this kind may be understood as
components of a policy of individualization, the aim of which is to control the consciousness of social
injustice. By individualizing the experiences of social living, these politics make the communicative
identification of social injustice difficult.
III
In the course of my presentation up to now I have attempted to indicate the difficulties which
are encountered by a macrosociological identification of potentialities for moral action. When we look
in particular at the class-specific conditions for the formulation of social norms, we see that empirically
effective claims to morality often acquire only the form of a relatively firm consciousness of injustice,
which is close to concrete experience and rests upon unarticulated and uncoordinated ideas of justice.
This consciousness of injustice allows the hegemonial system of norms to stand for pragmatic reasons,
without accepting its claim to normative validity, because it does not possess a comparably abstract
alternative system. In addition to this difficulty, there is the complicating factor that a socially effective
consciousness of injustice can be subjected to a historically varying ensemble of control mechanisms
which limit the chances for its articulation. It is, therefore, exceedingly problematic to bring in only
socially manifest claims for justice as indicators of the empirically effective value conflicts in a society.
If these considerations reach the core of the difficulties which we encounter in the analysis of
the normative potentialities of social groups, then I would like to propose the thesis that a social
analysis derived from Marxism must see as its task today the identification of moral conflicts
connected to the social class structure which are hidden behind late capitalism's facade of integration.
I can only elaborate upon this assertion in a few brief notes, admitting in advance that it has a somewhat
anachronistic sound at a time of inflationary farewells from the proletariat. I would like to question the
influential thesis of the de-activated class struggle on the basis of the provisional categorical
scaffolding developed above, in order to sketch hypothetically two zones of normative social conflict
which have largely been pushed aside into the realm of prepolitical privacy, but which nonetheless
continue to coincide with the lines of friction between the social classes. As I have indicated, this is
all very tentative now still.
The thesis of the institutionalized or deactivated class struggle is the centerpiece of all critical
diagnoses of the current situation which remove the identification of normative social conflicts from
the area of class theory. Its basic idea, which goes back, among other sources, to some of the postwar
work of the Frankfurt School, 15 is that late capitalistic state interventionism dries up the political and
practical interests of wage workers by means of a policy of material compensation and the institutional
integration of the wage policy of the labor unions. The stabilization of late capitalism is said to have
succeeded up to now because the economically dependent strata could be kept in a sort of apathetic
followership by means of quantifiable compensations (income and free time) which can be obtained
by routes which are relatively free of conflict. Because the social demands of the suppressed class have
been deprived of their moral character (Entmoralisierung), the center of the normative conflict in social
change thus shifts from class conflict to other centers which grow out of the increasing sensitivity of
socially privileged groups to immaterial deprivation.16 The central argument here, which, however,
remains hidden, is the allegation that the experiences of deprivation which are bound up with the social
class situation lead to demands that could be fulfilled by means conforming to capitalism, that is the
individual distribution of Money and time. For only by means of such a policy of social compensation
can the normative conflicts which lay at the basis of the social class struggle be made into issues that
can be subjected to technocratic management by the late capitalist state. Of course, one point in this
chain of arguments which remains unexamined is where and to what extent the normatively directed
demands of working people growing out of classspecific experiences of deprivation have been
deflected. I suspect that in the theory of the inactivated class struggle, a problematic explanation of the
degree to which late capitalist societies are normatively integrated has been combined with a
reductionistic interpretation of capitalistic class structure in order to be able to avoid this question.
In such conceptions, first of all, it is concluded from the factual recognition which the current
legitimating ideology enjoys, simply because the members of society carry out the reproductive tasks
assigned to them, that a normative, though fragile, acceptance of the justifying ideology of the welfare
state, supplemented by technocratic arguments, has taken place. The justice claims of the suppressed
class, it is alleged, can be satisfied to the extent that the proclaimed reduction of late capitalist politics
to strategies of crisis prevention has met with normative agreement. However, this interpretation of
the consensual character of late capitalist domination excludes an interpretation which would be more
plausible on the basis of my categorical considerations: that, on the one hand, prevailing postulates of
legitimacy are accepted only pragmatically, 17 without their even being capable of examination on the
basis of their ethical quality; and that, on the other hand, this pragmatically accepted system of norms
remains subject to a continuing skepticism fed by effectively controlled feelings of injustice. It is, of
course, incumbent upon such an interpretation to prove the existence of class-specific forms of
injustice consciousness which subject these merely endured norms of legitimation to unobtrusive, but
nonetheless consistent, doubt. Of course I cannot fulfill this requirement empirically, but only by
pointing to indicators of class-connected value conflicts. Before I attempt to do this, however, I must
first attempt to identify the other problematic components of the thesis of inactivated class strugglethe
reductionistic interpretation of capitalist class structure.
For in these conceptions, secondly, the private capitalist ownership and control of the means
of production remains the key element of a class theory which must explain the unequal distribution
of life chances in late capitalism; but, in the meantime, the concept of "life chances" itself has lost all
of its sociocultural dimensions. At the level of social theory, the life chances which are unequally
distributed among the social classes have been reduced to the single dimension of the elementary needs
of life as measured in quantifiable goods. Only because the class structure of capitalist society is
interpreted primarily as a system for the structurally unequal distribution of goods does the thesis
appear plausible that a preventative policy of providing the suppressed classes with quantifiable
compensations can satisfy their normative demands. Compensations conforming to this system can
indeed deal with the basic deprivation of the social class situation, at least in a relative sense, and thus
make class boundaries seem less clear. But this reduced basis for class theory is neither theoretically
compelling nor empirically convincing.18 If we pursue instead the stimulating suggestions given, for
example, by Anthony Giddens' concept of exploitation,19 or by Jóhann Arnason's anthropological
class theory,20 then a theory of classes designed to describe capitalism cannot be limited to the unequal
distribution of material goods, but must be extended to the asymmetrical distribution of cultural and
psychological life chances. I mean here a maldistribution of opportunities for cultural education, social
honor, and identityguaranteeing work, which is surely difficult to measure, but nonetheless empirically
verifiable. When we include in the perspective of critical social theory this dimension of the
structurally unequal distribution of immaterial goods, by which the class of wage workers which only
has disposal over its manual labor power, is cumulatively victimized, zones of normative conflict
become visible which have unobtrusively penetrated daily life, and which are based on class-specific
feelings of injustice.
As I see it, the perception of normative-practical social conflicts thus depends also upon the
depth and clarity of the class theory on which it rests. In order to at least indicate the basic lines of a
class conflict which has been forced below the threshhold of public political articulation, I will limit
myself to two hypothetical points. These proceed from the conviction that the elementary components
of societal proletarianness," the physical and alienated nature of the work, have not lost their
experiential significance, despite the historically unprecedented increase in the standard of living of
the working class. 21 Unarticulated indications of moral condemnation of the existing social order are
hidden, I suppose, in largely individualized struggles for social recognition and in daily struggles at
the work place. These may have the potential of becoming justice claims capable of universalization,
since they indirectly illuminate socially established asymmetries. In fact, however, so long as they
have not yet become demands capable of rational support, they form the basis of broadly varying
convictions, from anticapitalist conservatism to attitudes critical of capitalism.
(a)The existence of a class society based upon the unequal market chances of individual productive
agents, but ideologically connected to individual educational success, results in a lasting inequality in
the distribution of chances for social recognition. Informally and institutionally, the different
occupational positions are subjected to a hegemonial system of valuation which distributes
opportunities for respect and ascriptions of intelligence. As Richard Sennett and Jonathan Cobb show
in their impressive study, The Hidden Injuries of Class,22 this unequal distribution of social dignity
drastically restricts the possibility of individual self-respect for lower, primarily manually employed
occupational groups. So long as the identity-supporting recognition structure of a ollective social
movement is lacking, the practical reactions to these daily experiences of injustice are limited to
individual or group-specific constructions of a "counterculture of compensatory respect"attempts,
restricted to the privacy of prepolitical action or even to a solipsistic world of thought, either to
symbolically raise the status of one's own work activity or to symbolically lower the status of the
socially higher-placed form of work. These uncoordinated attempts to gain, or regain, social honor,
which have largely been deprived of coherent linguistic expression, are what Pierre Bourdieu describes
with his concept of "cultural distinction." They are based on highly sensitive consciousness of injustice,
which implicitly lays claim to a social redefinition of human dignity.
(b)Capitalist class society determines not only the type and purpose of individual occupational labor,
but also codetermines to a great extent the degree of freedom and control of individual work activities.
The members of the socially suppressed class, who hold the lowest ranks in the factory or office
hierarchy of dominance, are forced into monotonous work activities which offer little or no opportunity
for individual initiative. As a result of the widespread adoption of Taylor's principles of labor
efficiency capitalist production policy has detached the labor process from the technical knowledge of
the workers, isolated technical planning from the manual execution of work, and subjected the entire
labor process to detailed control on the basis of an organized monopoly of knowledge. The workers
reply to the experience of the systematic expropriation of their work activity 23 with a system of daily
violations of norms and rules in which they attempt to retain at least informal control of the entire
production process. The production policy of capitalist industrial enterprises is thus accompanied by a
counteracting process in which the workers attempt to apply their situationally superior knowledge as
an informal means of practical self-defense.24 I interpret these labor struggles, which lie below the
threshhold of publically recognized normative conflict, as indicators of a consciousness of injustice
which implicitly lays claim to the right to the autonomous organization of work.
These brief concluding thoughts, which have ignored group and gender-specific aspects in a
hardly admissable manner, are only intended to be illustrative. They are intended only to indicate the
direction in which such categorical considerations must proceed in order to help prepare the way for
empirical investigations of the unpublished side of class struggle, the political aspect of which has
been largely institutionalized. I believe that an analysis of society which accurately describes the reality
of capitalista class relations must construct its fundamental concepts in such a way that it can grasp
the normative potential of socially suppressed groups. The concept of the consciousness of injustice is
intended to serve this purpose. With it, the critical theory of society can be kept open to socially
repressed moral conflicts in which suppressed classes make us aware of the structural restrictions upon
their claims to just treatmentthat is, to as yet unrealized potentialities of historical progress.
Notes
*This is a slightly altered version of a paper presented at the Inter-University Center in Dubrovnik in
April, 1981; a German version appears in Leviathan, Jg. 9 (1981), H. 3/4. I have benefited from
conversations with Birgit Mahnkopf; Hans Joas provided stimulating and useful criticism.
1. Cf. Seyla Benhabib, "Procedural and Discursive Norms and Rationality," Ms. 1980; Herbert
Kitschelt, "Moralisches Argumentieren und Sozialtheorie," im Archiv f. Rechts- und
Sozialphilosophie, Bd. LXVI/3 (1980), p. 391 ff.
2. I have borrowed this concept which indicates desymbolized forms of morality from Max Weber,
Economy and Society, 2 vols., Günther Roth and Claus Wittichs (eds.), (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1978), vol. II, p. 929.
3. Cf. especially Barrington Moore, Injustice. The Social Basis of Obedience and Revolt (London,
1979); George Rudé, Ideology and Popular Protest (New York, 1980).
4. George Rudé, op. cit., p. 28. und Handeln," in Kursbuch 60, 1980, p. 43 ff.
5. Cf. Rainer Döbert, ''Was mir am wenigsten weht tut, dafür entscheid ich mich dann auch." "Normen,
Einsichten und Handeln," in Kursbuch 60, 1980, p. 43 ff.
6. Michael Mann, "The Social Cohesion of Liberal Democracy," American Sociological Review, vol.
35, no. 3 (p. 423 ff), p. 435.
7. Pierre Bourdieu, "Kulturelle Reproduktion und soziale Reproduktion," in P. Bourdieu and J. C.
Passeron, Grundlagen einer Theorie der symbolischen Gewalt (Frankfurt am Main, 1973), p. 88 ff.
8. Ibid.
9. Cf. the literature quoted in the essay of Michael Mann; also Frank Parkin, Class Inequality and
Political Order (London, 1971), chap. 3 ("Class Inequality and Meaning System").
10. Barrington Moore has developed a similar thought under the title "The Expropriation of Moral
Outrage"; however, he limits this largely to the culture industry. B. Moore, Injustice, op. cit., chap. 14,
p. 7.
11. Michael Foucault, The Order of Things, Alan Sheridan, trans. (New York: Random House, 1973),
p. 7.
12. Cf. the examples given by Oskar Negt and Alexander Kluge, in O. Negt und A. Kluge,
Offentlichkeit und Erfahrung (Frankfurt am Main, 1972).
13. Cf., for example, Ulrich Rödel und Tim Guldimann, "Sozialpolitik als soziale Kontrolle,"
Starnberger Studien 2 (Frankfurt am Main, 1972), p. 11 ff; Lothar Hack und Irmgard Hack,
"Bewirtschaftung der Zukunftsperspektive," Gesellschaft, Beiträge zur Marxschen Theorie 12
(Frankfurt am Main, 1979), p. 101 ff.
14. Vgl. etwa Wulf Tessin, "Stadtumbau und Umsetzung," Leviathan, 6 (1978), p. 501 ff.
15. Cf. David Held, Introduction to Critical Theory, (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1980), chap. 13.
16. Cf. Jürgen Habermas, Legitimation Crisis, Jeremy Shapiro, trans. (Boston: Beacon Press, 1975),
Claus Offe, "Politische Herrschaft und Klassenstrukturen," G. Kress und D. Serghaas (Hrsg.),
Politikwissenschaft (Frankfurt am Main, 1969), p. 155 ff.
17. Michael Mann uses the concept of "pragmatic acceptance" in the essay cited.
18. Opposed to this is the "disparity theory" proposed especially by Claus Offe. Cf. Claus Offe,
"Politische Herrschaft und Klassenstrukturen," op. cit. However, there seems to me to be good
empirical evidence for a much closer connection between social class and cultural life-chances than
that maintained by "disparity theory." For the Federal Republic of Germany, cf. the presentation by
Karl Ulrich Mayer, which is oriented toward categories suggested by Anthony Giddens; "Ungleiche
Chancen und Llassenbildung," Sociale Welt, Jg. XXVIII (1977), p. 466 ff.
19. Anthony Giddens, The Class Structure of the Advanced Societies (London, 1973), chap. 7.
20. Jóhann P. Arnason, "Marx und Habermas," Axel Honneth und Urs. Jaeggi (eds.), Arbeit. Handlung.
Normativität. Theorien des Historischen Materialismus II (Frankfurt am Main, 1980), p. 137 ff.
21. Cf. the uncommonly stimulating study by Josef Moser, "Abschied von der 'Proletariat'.
Sozialstruktur und Lage der Arbeiterschaft in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland in historischer
Perspektive," to appear in W. Conze und M. R. Lepsius (eds.), Sozialgeschichtliche Grundlagen der
Bundesrepublik Deutschland (Stuttgart, in press).
22. (New York, 1973); cf. to the whole complex also William J. Goode, The Celebration of Heroes:
Prestige as a Control System (Berkeley, 1978), chap. 6.
23. Cf. Harry Braverman, Labor and Monopoly Capital (New York and London, 1974).
24. Vgl. Rainer-W. Hoffman, "Die Verwissenschaftlichung der Produktion und das Wissen der
Arbeiter," G. Böhme und M. v. Engelhardt (eds.), Entfremdete Wissenschaft (Frankfurt am Main,
1979), p. 229 ff.