“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
Friday, June 29, 2012
metaphysics of paper 1
Every kind of paper is purchased by the "waste-men." One of these dealers said to me: "I've often in my time 'cleared out' a lawyer's office. I've bought old briefs, and other law papers, and 'forms' that weren't the regular forms then, and any d——d thing they had in my line. You'll excuse me, sir, but I couldn't help thinking what a lot of misery was caused, perhaps, by the cwts. of waste I've bought at such places. If my father hadn't got mixed up with law he wouldn't have been ruined, and his children wouldn't have had such a hard fight of it; so I hate law. All that happened when I was a child, and I never understood the rights or the wrongs of it, and don't like to think of people that's so foolish. I gave 1 1/2 d. a pound for all I bought at the lawyers, and done pretty well with it, but very likely that's the only good turn such paper ever did any one—unless it were the lawyers themselves." –Henry Mayhew, Of the street buyers of waste (paper), London Labour
Men no sooner discovered the discovered the admirable art of communicating their ideas by way of figures than it was necessary to chose the material for defining those characters. – Encyclopedie, entry under Papeterie
From the grammatological point of view, few sentences could sum up the logocentric ideology better than this one from Diderot’s Encyclopedie. It is a history in two steps: in one of which the “figures” are discovered, and in the other of which they find a substrate, a material upon which they could assume their secondary, visible existence. In this story, the material is already substituted –its existence is laid out under the sign of substitution - or of supplementation, or of sublimation. The true mark, the idea, exists before its fall into the world of paper – or papyrus, or clay tables, or vellum.
In a Sumerian story, the invention of writing and the material for defining the characters are put in a closer narrative proximity – one in which that matter exists in a series of symbolically important materials that form the basis of what Jean Jacques Glassner calls a “duel”. The ur-form of the story is a competition between two magicians, one of whom transforms common objects into living beings, the other one of whom transforms common objects into superior living beings that eat the first magicians tricks – a stone becomes a snake, for instance, while the leaf of a tree becomes an eagle that eats the snake. A similar story of the duel of matter is told of Enmerkar, the ruler of a powerful state, and the Lord of Aratta, a distant state that Enmerkar wishes to gain tribute. Enmerkar sends messangers threatening Arrata. The first messenger threatens to have the goddess Inanna drown the city. The Lord of Aratta sent back a refusal, and a challenge: could Enmerkar send grain to the city in nets rather than sacks? Enmerkar does so, sending grains that sprout and provide a layer over the holes in the nets. The second time, Enmerkar sends his scepter, and the third time a garment. The forth time Enmerkar does something completely new, and without consulting the gods: he takes a lump of clay and he wrote upon it. The duel, here, comes to an end with the Lord of Aratta having to take hold of the clay tablet in order to read it. As in a children’s game, by touching the object, the Lord of Aratta signals his submission.
But this moment is less the conclusion of a magical duel than the first unintended result of the letter – for Enmerkar was not originally intending to send a letter. Here’s how the passage is translated by Fabienne Huber Vulliet:
“His speech was substantial,and its contents extensive. The messenger, whose mouth was heavy, was not able to repeat it. Because the messenger, whose mouth was tired,was not able to repeat it, the lord of Kulaba patted some clay and wrote the message as if on a tablet. Formerly, the writing of messages on clay was not established. Now, under the sun and on that day, it was indeed so. The lord of Kulaba inscribed the massage like a tablet. It was just like that.”
The message and the clay, here, come together in a narrative about tricky objects – about metamorphosis – that is enfolded in another narrative about imperial power. From the point of view of the author of the lord of Kulaba, the signs and the tablet are two sides of one dated event (Now, under the sun and on that day…). There is a triangle here between the figures, the tablet, and the time – for that day is, in a sense, signed and becomes that day, the object of an act of deixis.
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Disaster in the zona: hard times a-comin'
How dumb are the economic policies our master’s have loaded
on our back? This dumb:
“…the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has downwardly
revised potential economic output for 2017 by 6.6 percent since the start of
the recession. This may seem trivial, but for a $15 trillion economy, this dip
reflects roughly $1.3 trillion in lost future income in a single year, on
top of years of cumulative forgone income (already at roughly
$3 trillion and counting). The level of potential output projected for 2017
before the recession is now expected to be reached between 2019 and
2020—representing roughly two-and-a-half years of forgone potential income.” –
Andrew Fieldhouse
That forgone potential income will not be coming out of the
pockets of the plutocrats. If in the
next four years we face another slump, the only group that will get bailed out
will be the fat cats, just as the only group bailed out in 2008-2009 were the
bankers, boiler room conmen, hedgefunders and offshore men who got the Fed’s
Instaloan cure. So we have a rough estimate, at least, of the next step down by
the American middle class. They can stare at it, or they can stare at the
glassy screen of their tv and pretend that the instruments haven’t flashed the
disaster sign. I think of this as sort
of the Dixiefication of the U.S. – every space will eventually look like S.C.,
with the rich in the stratosphere and the rest happy to get catfish.
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
The corner stone of the wealth of nations
Marx congratulated Malthus (whose work he otherwise disparaged)
for understanding that Smith’s more sophisticated division between productive and unproductive
labour was the foundation stone of The Wealth of Nations. The metaphor of the
foundation stone is important, here – Say, as Marx knew, had claimed that it
was the stone that the builders could reject – although Say did not frame it in
that biblical way. Marx, who had a great pool of references whirling in his
unconscious, probably fixed on this – he did like troping the biblical Zitat.
But why was it so essential, in Marx’s view? I think it is
because the distinction allows one to see that capitalism generates, internally,
a socially defined class structure that cannot be separated from its
economically defined activity. It is a class structure that is different in
kind from the status structures before it, even as the forms of distinction
characterizing those status structures heralded the new system, one where the
great binary, the spheres of production and circulation, allowed something that
seemed impossible in the Malthusian world: untrammeled growth. And thus the
great wheel of fortune would be broken. Like Prospero’s gear:
I'le breake my staffe,
Bury it certaine fadomes in the earth,
And deeper then did euer Plummet sound
Ile drowne my booke –
Bury it certaine fadomes in the earth,
And deeper then did euer Plummet sound
Ile drowne my booke –
So too would the ancien regime bury itself.
But if the class system of capitalism has done with the former
unproductive class, the aristocracy, and industrializes agriculture, thus
chasing away the peasant and his moeurs, the dualism of class does not
necessarily seem like a dualism. This is largely due to the fact that the
sphere of circulation in which the circulation worker moves does not form a
homogeneous opposition to production: the workers within it are not capitalists
per se.
In fact, the capitalist remove from nature and from production
is accomplished under the cover of the circulation worker, who becomes,
increasingly, the ideal character type of modernity.
Saturday, June 23, 2012
reading the classics
Calvino begins his essay, Why read the Classics, by defining
them in terms of a characteristic phrase: “I am re-reading x” The classics are
haunted, as it were, by re-reading. We re-read in the classroom to answer
questions (a site Calvino, I think mistakenly, throws out of consideration – an
awful lot of reading is tied to the classroom, and it often seems that when we
re-read on our own, the ghost of a classroom desk trails behind us, with its
pencil groove and its slight, metallic smell – mixed in my case with the smell
of a brown bag and a peanut butter and jelly sandwich in wax paper ). We
re-read outside of the classroom because, a, we are defensive about not having
read,and want to make it known that we, too, have already read, and b, (the
meat of Calvino’s theme), even when reading the first time, the classic imposes
it scale on us, one that suggests an infinity of re-readings. When reading a
classic, we cannot “escape” its design. In this sense, the classic is the
opposite of escapist literature. We read that to get “lost”, by which we mean
‘lost’ from our everyday routines, our ordinary world, the one outside the
book. It isn’t that we do not get lost in the classics – but it is a different
kind of lost. It is all about disorientation and fate. Freud, in his essay on
the uncanny, tells a story about getting lost in Rome, and finding that, over
and over again, he has taken the wrong roads, which keep leading him back to a
doubtful neighborhood. A neighborhood, we assume, that is a redlight district. Thus,
in one sense, from the perspective of the super-ego Freud is lost, but, from
another, more chthonic perspective, that of the libido, he is following the
line of his fate.
This is the lostness experienced inside the classic. We are
uncomfortably aware of some exterior
intentionality that we have somehow swallowed – we are possessed.
Of course, the classics of high modernism show an acute
awareness of the other kind of lostness. Leopold Bloom is a great admirer of
Paul de Kock, a nineteenth century author of lubricious fare. And the lostness
in the popular novel that is a rush – we read it all at once –is mimicked in
prose that gushes with consciousness – in Ulysses, in To the Lighthouse, in
Sound and the Fury, among others. And yet that enactment of being lost, carried
away, is highly stylized – it is in fact just the kind of thing you don’t find
in a popular novel. These moments are, as well, re-readable – in fact, if there
are degrees in the infinity of re-reading in which the classic lives, they are
even more re-readable than more conventional prose.
Oddly, Calvino misses a trick by confining the notion of
re-reading to the classic text and not comparing it to oral ones – for there
are stories that we tell about ourselves that we seem to tell over and over
again. Years and years ago, I visited Monterray, Mexico, with a friend. I have
found myself telling the story of that visit to dozens of people since. I’m not
sure why that story has stuck with me so much, but as I tell the story, it
becomes more and more devoid of living memory and more and more full of
intentionality – of rhetorical memory, if you will. I have other stories like
that as well. I think most people have a canon of stories they tell about
themselves – their own classics. But in contrast to the re-telling that these
stories seem to compel, there is a certain shyness about telling the same story
twice. We are frankly embarrassed to be caught telling the same story twice. It
is boring. Or it shows some fatal lack of memory – one should remember that X
person has already heard the story.
And this gives us another clue to the nature of classics:
they are eerily unembarrassed. They are not embarrassed about incest, about
patricide and matricide, about dimemberment, and rape, about suicide – all the
stories tumble out. They are even not embarrassed about boredom.
This is what sets the contemporary taste on edge about the
classics. There is nothing more dismissive than the phrase, “that’s boring.” In
a sense, the fear of boredom and the fear of age are connected in the ordinary
norms of our everyday life. Youth sticks in the windpipe of the middle aged,
they can’t cough it up or swallow it. And boredom is especially something to be
fled. In both cases, the organic reality – that we age, and that there are
large necessary patches of boredom in our lives if we actually do anything –
are subject to a repression that expresses itself in the aesthetic sphere – a sphere
that we tend both to diminish (it is only entertainment) and present in social
situations to the exclusion of anything else. In the classics, boredom is intended.
This seems utterly mad to those of us
weaned on the entertainment industry’s quest to never, ever bore. Of course,
that quest is itself mad – it dulls, and it excludes re-reading, which runs
counter to surprise and sensation. The
intentional boredom in the classic doesn’t entail that we will always re-read
the boring patches and be bored – it does entail that the possibility not only
exists, but is embraced. In the Library of Babel, there are an infinite number
of boring texts, and texts that are even more boring, interpreting these boring
texts. A classic that bored completely would not be re-read – one that
interested completely would not be re-read either, for it would tend to impose
the kind of lostness that is foreign to the classic.
Thursday, June 21, 2012
unproductive labour and literature
In 1790, 75 percent of the working population of Austria was
involved with agriculture (David Good); this was true of 73 percent of the population of the U.S. at
the time, and approximately the same percentage
in Prussia as well (Cambridge Economic History). In Europe as a whole, at the
time of the French Revolution, when we look not only at the population that
directly labored in the fields, but include those who depended directly on
them, we get even more elevated figures: 90 percent, for instance, for France. The exceptions are
Britain and Holland, with the percentage being as low it is estimated as 40 percent in Britain. These were the first economies to enduringly get past what the
growth economists call “Malthusian limits” – that is, an agricultural sector that
shrinks in population size while growing in productivity such that it can
support a much larger non-agricultural population. The post-Malthusian world is
the world of the artificial paradise, in which I, and everybody I know, has
lived all our lives – except when escaping in little pockets of fantasy, sleep,
digestion, sex, the third life, and phobias.
It is hard to measure these pockets. But we can confidently say that in
other places, the Malthusian world lingered on – in Galicia, or in Russia, or in
China and India. And the breaking of the Malthusian limits was in many ways a
huge trauma, involving starvation, the total breakdown of cultural constants,
emigration, loneliness, and changes in the internal signaling structure of our
bodies and emotions that we are still grappling with on a world wide scale.
In the post-Malthusian world, the productive and the
unproductive took on different characteristics. It was no longer of a small
merchant class, nobility, and an overwhelming peasantry. It was no longer Robin
Hood’s world. Marx’s world was that of the nation on the forefront of
industrialization – England – but even in Marx’s time, the elements that would
subordinate the sphere of production to the sphere of circulation were in
evidence.
As Murray Smith (1993) has pointed out, Marx’s comments
about productive and unproductive labor in the second book of Capital don’t
cohere, completely, with his comments in the Grundrisse. Smith usefully defines
four forms of unproductive labor: Smith’s form, in which labor is paid for out
of personal revenue, such as household labor; labor of the self-employed
commodity producer; labor of the circulation worker; and what he calls
“social-maintenance” labor.
Smith’s definitions are all derived from the social position
of the laborer with regard to capital. Productive labor, then, is not about
producing a material thing, but about producing surplus value. The salesman and
the teacher can both be exploited, in this reading, when we look at their labor
from the point of view of the total social product, but they are not exploited
as productive labor is exploited. What is important is not to see these forms
as fixed elements in the social picture, but rather as frontiers always
susceptible to be changed in their location in the social whole. If we put the
sphere of circulation at one end, as a constant parameter of non-productive
labor, we cannot really make the same claim about other non-productive workers.
Edward
Wolff puts it like this: “Unproductive activity
affects the disposition of commodities
but creates neither use value nor exchange value.
Productive labor creates surplus value; unproductive labor absorbs surplus
value.” (1987)
It is
in the cruel intersection of these two sentences that I locate that lonely
beast, the modern writer.
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Kill the poor
…
It was during his Koln period that Marx, according to his
own account, made one of his most important discoveries: that the sociological
category, “the poor”, was vacuous. The poor were easily recognized in
pre-capitalist economies: the beggars, the serfs, the slaves, they all exist
under the sign of minus. They had less, and that quantitative fact defined
their social existence. What Marx saw was that capitalist society was not just
a matter of old wine in new bottles – the archaic poor were now free labor.
Perhaps nothing so separates Marxism from religion as this insight: in all the great monotheistic religions, poverty is
viewed in feudal terms: the poor you will have always with you. But in
capitalism, or modernity tout court, the poor continue to exist as a
mystificatory category, usually in a binary with the rich. In fact, the real binary
in society is capital and labor. The bourgeois economists, and even the
non-scientific socialists, operate as though the archaic poor still exist. To
help them, we need to develop a method of redistribution that is, in essence,
charity – run by non-profits or run by the government, but still charity. But
Marx saw this in very different terms. Labor produces the economic foundation
of capitalism – value. In these terms, it is not a question of the poor being a
qualitative or moral category – it is a question of the alienation of value, of
surplus value, that circulates through the entire capitalist system and allows
it to grow on its own, while at the same time making it vulnerable to crisis.
Baudelaire famously created a slogan for the 1848 revolution:
Assommons les pauvres. Kill the poor! This seems on the surface to be the most radical and effective of welfare
schemes, for it would get rid of the poor once and for all. But Marx explains why it wouldn’t work: the poor describes an
illformed social category, a survival
from the past. And on the other hand, to kill the working class would be to
kill capitalism itself. What Marx learned in the forests of Koln was that capitalism was as
atheist as could be against property. Far from being founded on the defense of
property, capitalism was quite comfortable with changing its definition to suit
– capital. What was once a right of the “poor” – for instance, to glean
windfallen branches – could be swept away with a penstroke when the large
landowners so desired. What was once the very definition of property - to have the full usage of an item one buys - can suddenly be hedged round with limitations when we try, for instance, to copy it and upload it on the internet. We are suddenly deprived of the inalienable right to give our property - and this is named Intellectual Property, and a legal structure grows up around it in a heartbeat. Property is not, then, a constant element, but a fluid one,
changing its meaning and effect with the system of production in place. To
describe the poor as having little “property”, in other words, reified
property, placed it outside the social, and disguised the social conflicts
encoded in what property is.
Marx’s logical clarity, however, is a bit too bright even
for many of his own followers, who are as prone to fall into the language of
the struggle between the poor and the rich as anybody else. It is, after all,
one of the richest images we have, an leads irresistibly to a one-sided
discourse on equality.
Nevertheless, Marx did not take this to mean that all
workers are “productive”.
Tuesday, June 19, 2012
Unproductive labor 1
The idea of unproductive labor is evidently rooted in the
way wealth is regarded in the pre-capitalist mindset. This does not mean that
at some point, the concept was unambiguous – on the contrary. The moral economy
of the pre-capitalist era in Europe (by which I mean, simply, the domination of
pre-capitalist economic ties, and not the absence of capitalist enterprise of
one sort or another) was organized around an implicitly conflicted notion of
temporal and intemporal glory. The royal or noble banquet was, at one and the
same time, a symbol of the intemporal glory awaiting the believer in heaven and
a display of pride and gluttony that would lead the sinner to hell. Underneath
the sumptuary laws that came out of pagan as well as Christian jurisprudence was
a strong sense of Fortuna – a sense that there was an equilibrium in the world
of goods deriving from the fact that goods were limited by divine and physical
law, and he who had a good in a sense took it from he who did not have the
good.
In the 17th century, certain thinkers – Petty and
Boisguilbert, for instance – and a certain class of merchants and projectors
dissolved, theoretically and practically, essential elements in this old pattern of thought. In so doing, they
did not utterly reject it, but used parts of it in their own bold suggestions
as to how to reform the business of the nation. This reform could not do
without the idea that some activities were productive and some were
unproductive –and indeed, to an extent, they were bound together. The noble who
ate and drank and the peasant who toiled and spinned were part of one economic
system, separated, from the point of view of commodities, by the fact that the
noble added nothing to the food or drink while the peasant added its essential ingredients. Into this mix, however, one had
to add money – with which addition the duality of producer and unproducer
became extremely confused.
Adam Smith, of course, developed the notion of unproductive
labor in The Wealth of Nations, and was lauded for it by Malthus, who took the
notion to be the cornerstone of the work. Another reader, however,
Jean-Baptiste Say, disagreed absolutely, and urged the removal of the
distinction entirely as one confusing a number of elements: a sort of cult of
the material over the immaterial; an incoherence in extending the notion of
exchange value to its universal scope within the economy; and a pernicious
moral and legal effect on the beneficient speculator, who labors under the
suspicion of parasitism when, in effect, he produces the framework of credit
inside of which production can flourish.
Schumpeter tacitly awards Say points, and refers to the
distinction between productive and unproductive labor as a “dusty museum piece”
in his History of Economic Thought.
However, he adds that Marx pretty much grasped the important thing in
Smith’s distinction, which was not that there is a difference between useful
labor and non-useful labor – it is not that the cook for the noble is creating
a non-useful pie for his aristocratic appetite – but rather that there are
different value addeds:
“He [Smith] had no use, of course, for the physiocratic
proposition that only labor employed in agriculture is productive any more than
he had use for the 'mercantilist' proposition that only labor employed in
export industries is. But pouring away the physiocrat wine, he retained the
bottles and filled them with wine of his own: he defined labor as productive
that 'adds to the value of the subject upon which it is bestowed' (op. cit. p.
314) and exemplified this by the case of factory workers who, as he adds by way
of explanation (ibid. p. 316), live on 'that part of the annual produce of the
land and labour which replaces capital' (with a profit); and he defined labor
as unproductive that does not add (exchange) value to anything and exemplified
this by the labor of the menial servant and that 'of some of the most
respectable orders in the society' such as the sovereign 'with all the officers
both of justice and war who serve under him' and 'are maintained by part of the
annual produce of the industry of other people.' “
Value is evidently the key to the distinction – but value
here is defined by value for capital, and nothing else. This is the sense that
Marx extracted from Smith – as Schumpeter says.
However, given this definition by way of a system in which
production, for the sake of the analysis in Capital, is analyzed in distinction
from circulation – which is analyzed in Book 2 – and then analyzed in, one
might say, the real synthesis of the two – which is where Book 3 is going –
this definition, to row back to where we were, has to be dialecticized (and
lyed and dyed) before it becomes useful.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
Coincidence: shadow and fact
1. In 1850, Dickens began a novel with an exemplary sentence: “Whether I shall turn out to be the hero of my own life, or whether that s...
-
You can skip this boring part ... LI has not been able to keep up with Chabert in her multi-entry assault on Derrida. As in a proper duel, t...
-
Ladies and Gentlemen... the moment you have all been waiting for! An adventure beyond your wildest dreams! An adrenaline rush from start to...
-
LI feels like a little note on politics is called for. The comments thread following the dialectics of diddling post made me realize that, ...

