Marxist and Semiotic Analysis of the Matrix
Essay by review • December 26, 2010 • Research Paper • 3,693 Words (15 Pages) • 2,684 Views
THE MATRIX
The Matrix was written and directed by Andy and Larry Wachowski. It released in 1999. The film belongs to the science fiction genre and revolves around a young man by the name of Thomas Anderson who is on a quest to discover what the mysterious "Matrix" is. The movie draws inspiration from a Japanese anime known as "Ghost in a Shell".
The Wachoski brothers incorporated many signs and symbols into the movie relating to Christianity, Greek mythology and Marxism. It contains several references to the book " Alice in Wonderland" by Lewis Carroll. There is much that can be interpreted by reading in between the lines of the film and it is for this reason that I have chosen to analyze the text of the film.
THE MATRIX AND MARXISM
Marxist thought was developed by Karl Marx. It is one of the most powerful and suggestive ways available to the media analyst for analyzing society and its institutions. "The Matrix" has a sizable amount of Marxist thought hidden away in it.
When Neo is brought to the real world, Morpheus tells him that humanity is fighting a war against intelligent machines created early in the 21st century. After being denied their primary power source, the Sun, by the human race, the machines responded by enslaving human beings and using them as their source for energy, growing countless people in immense fields of pods identical to the one in which Neo awoke. It turns out that the world which Neo has inhabited since birth, the Matrix, is an illusory simulated reality construct of the world of 1999, developed by the machines to keep the human population docile whilst they are connected to generators and their energy is harvested.
According to Marxism, the Base, which is the economic means of production is divided into the Bourgeios and the Proletariat. In the film, The machines and the humans represent these subdivisions. The Bourgeios was the upper class and consisted of the people who owned the ecomonic means of production. The machines and artificial intelligence represent the Bourgeios. They are in control of the humans and the entire matrix. The Proletariat was the working class. They worked for the Bourgeios. The humans represent this class. The machines are dependent on the energy produced by the humans for their survival. In the same way, the Buorgeiose is dependent on the Proletariat's labour for their economic means of production.
To keep the Proletariat docile and cooperative, the members of the Bourgeios create a sense of "false consciousness". This is represented by the simulated world that the humans are kept in, the matrix. This world is an illusion created by the machines to keep the humans from realising the truth. The humans are unaware that the world outside had been taken over by the machines and they continue to exist as if nothing has happened. They are kept in pods that are isolated from each other by the machines. This is indicative of the alienated labour of the Proletariat.
Neo, Morpheus and the others represent those who believe in the Marxist school of thought. They are the trying to awaken people from the false consciousness that has been created by the machines. Because they know that the Matrix is an illusion, they are not subject to the rules that govern it and this makes them free from laws such as gravity, speed, etc. Similarly, those who followed the Marxist school of thought were free from the false consciousness created by the Bourgeois. Neo, Morpheus and the others are hunted by the Matrix's bodyguards who are known as "Agents". These are programs created by the Mainframe to hunt down potential threats and control them. The Agents represent "consumer lust" to which many of Neo's comrades fall prey.
There exist humans who were born free like Tank and others born in Zion. They could not enter the matrix as they lacked devices implanted by the machines to connect them to the system.They represent the people who created and followed the concept of Marxism right from the beginning. They do not have the frame of mind to function in a capitalist society. However Neo, Trinity and the rest were born in captivity of the machines and were freed by other free humans. They have the devices implanted by the machines and hence can enter the matrix. They represent humans who have lived and functioned in a capitilist environment and have then opened their minds to Marxism.
One signficant scene in the movie is where Neo is rescued from his white-collar job by the rebels who are led by Morpheus. It could perhaps signify that he is being rescued from the capitilist world by those who follow the Marxist school of thought.
Another important scene is where Neo is given a choice between two pills: one blue, which would enable him to wake up safe in his bed but never learn the truth about the Matrix; the other red, which would allow him to "see how deep the rabbit-hole goes". Here the colour red could be used to symbolise Communism. The pill is used to rescue him from the Matrix representing him being saved from the world of capitalism.
THE MATRIX AND SEMIOTICS
Semiotics is the theory and study of signs and symbols, especially as elements of language or other systems of communication, and comprising semantics, syntactics, and pragmatics. Semiotics is concerned with everything that can be taken as a sign. A sign is everything, which can be taken as significantly substituting for something else. The Matrix incorporates a variety of signs and symbols.
The storyline of the Matrix is an allegory. Allegory is a form of extended metaphor, in which objects, persons, and actions in a narrative, are equated with the meanings that lie outside the narrative itself. The underlying meaning has moral, social, religious, or political significance, and characters are often personifications of abstract ideas as charity, greed, or envy. Thus an allegory is a story with two meanings, a literal meaning and a symbolic meaning. Neo is "The One". The Oracle has prophesied that "The One" would hail the destruction of the Matrix, end the war and bring freedom to the people. In short, he is the saviour of the human race. This can be compared to the story of Christ. He was the Saviour who had been prophesied about and would bring about the freedom of mankind. Neo is an icon as he represents the saviour.Christ was betrayed by
...
...