The understanding of base and superstructure underwent a significant expansion after Marx's death, a development traced by scholar Dileep Edara as a "genealogy of heterogeneity" or a conceptual "blunder". This transformation moved the concept from Marx's specific politico-legal formulation to an all-encompassing model that included a wide range of social phenomena.
Friedrich Engels The origin of the expanded, panoramic version of the superstructure is largely found in the later works of
Friedrich Engels. In popular and accessible texts like
Anti-Dühring (1878) and
Socialism: Utopian and Scientific (1880), Engels redefined the superstructure to include not just legal and political institutions but also "the religious, philosophical, and other ideas of a given historical period". In
Anti-Dühring, he refers to the "ideological superstructure in the shape of philosophy, religion, art, etc." This version, which grouped all non-economic aspects of society into a single superstructural category, became highly influential and was widely accepted as the standard
Marxist position. This expanded model created theoretical problems, as it appeared to promote a crude
economic determinism where culture and ideas were seen as mere passive reflections of the economic base. In his later letters, notably to
Conrad Schmidt,
Joseph Bloch, and
Franz Mehring in the 1890s, Engels attempted to correct this "mechanistic" interpretation. He introduced important qualifications, arguing that the economic element is the "
ultimately determining factor in history" and not the
only one. He stressed the "interaction" of the various elements of the superstructure, which could in turn "exercise their influence upon the course of the historical struggles". While intended as a refinement, these "corrective efforts" had the paradoxical effect of solidifying the heterogeneous version of the superstructure, as they were predicated on the assumption that culture, ideology, and other factors were indeed part of this superstructure. In another attempt at explanation, Engels proposed that the state arises from the social
division of labor. As society creates new "common functions", the people assigned to them develop their own interests and become an independent power, which, while generally following the trend of production, also reacts back upon it. Later analysts, such as RJ Robinson, have critiqued Engels's explanations as inadequate, arguing that they lack a coherent
materialist or
dialectical basis. Robinson contends that the concept of "relative autonomy" and the appeal to determination "in the last instance" function as assertions rather than explanations, failing to specify the actual mechanisms connecting the base and superstructure.
Second International and Soviet Marxism Engels's formulations were inherited and further developed by the leading theorists of the
Second International. Figures like
Georgi Plekhanov and
Karl Kautsky adopted the all-inclusive model of the superstructure. Plekhanov, in particular, with his strong interest in art and culture, consistently placed these domains within the ideological superstructure. He developed the concept of
social psychology as a mediating link between the economic base and the "higher" ideologies, further cementing the idea of a complex, multi-layered superstructure. This trajectory culminated in the official doctrine of
Soviet Marxism under
Joseph Stalin. Stalin's 1950 work,
Marxism and the Problems of Linguistics, offered a definitive, though highly idiosyncratic, formulation. While arguing that language was neither base nor superstructure, he provided a canonical definition of what was: "The superstructure is the political, legal, religious, artistic, philosophical views of society and the political, legal and other institutions corresponding to them." In a radical inversion of Marx's logic, Stalin suggested that ideological views precede and "provide" the corresponding institutions, rather than institutions arising from the base. This view was enshrined in official texts like the
Great Soviet Encyclopedia, which defined the superstructure as the "totality of the ideological relations, views, and institutions". This formulation became the standard, unquestioned version in "official" Marxism and greatly influenced Marxist thought worldwide. == Theoretical problems and debates ==