Ari, I have this ongoing mapping project, to develop and use it as an 
illustration similar to what you asked for, though it still is in progress: 
https://graphcommons.com/graphs/64d91469-5f7d-4dba-9204-c8574945948c?auto=true

If zoom out, the cluster of nodes looks like a ball shape. If you imagine a 
midline, cutting the form from the west to the east it would be dividing the 
ball in two hemispheres. The line would also represents the flow of time and 
political 'center'. From middle to up would be political right, and down 
political left. Then adding two imaginary parallel lines one little bit above 
the midline and other below we would get three fields: 

1. Upper / top: this field would represents where managerial classes are 
serving for capitalists class fractions under liberal and conservative 
capitalist leadership and ideology (from little to no compromise to working 
classes), 

2. Lower / down: nodes located in this field represent managerial classes 
alignment with the agency and the ideology of organized working classes, 
radical social democracy, socialism, communism from little to no compromise to 
capitalist classes, 

3. Middle field between the two lines: which is divided by the midline is where 
the managerial class has been developing its own consciousness in struggle and 
compromise with capitalist and working classes. Nodes representing alignment 
and compromising between managerial and working classes are concentrated in the 
below (southern) part of this field. Whereas alignment and compromise with 
capitalists are represented by the nodes are located in the above (northern) 
part. 

This analytical map only illustrates the ideological elements and links. Almost 
all nodes, from left to right up to down, are members of managerial classes, 
including Marx himself, or even Bakunin. 

Analyses of Van Der Pijl, and Dumenil and Levy strongly link this ideological 
aspect and relationships to Marx' class formation and fractional analysis, 
developed in Capital. 

Orsan 

> On 9 Jan 2018, at 19:10, ari <a...@kein.org> wrote:
> 
> Orsan, would you mind explaining this with some illustration of where the 
> managerial class has mediated, in alliance with the working class, during the 
> long 20th century?
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