ABSTRACT

This conclusion explores what a Marxian approach to need can offer today. Where other forms of theory attempt to stabilise or resolve the politics of need, Marx's crucial innovation was to insist on its irreducibly political character, exposing needs as contingent achievements shot through with struggle, oppression, and suffering rather than natural givens. On that basis, the chapter considers both the opportunities this approach offers and the ways it must be adapted to confront the political challenges of the present. First, needs-claiming is revealed as a political project: its appeal to necessity often concealing acts of power and exclusion, sometimes doing real harm, yet also carrying a critical potential that can be redirected towards radical ends. Second, while later theorists have emphasised the fractured nature of the politics of need, a Marxian perspective recentres the relationship between needs and work, showing how a deep dependence on wage-labour continues to structure how needs are defined, satisfied, and contested. Third, against the anti-political closures of much contemporary theorising, Marx invites us to see theory itself as political practice: a performative re-presentation that unsettles common sense, revealing at once both the horror and the hope of our condition.