Keith Hart on Tue, 21 May 2002 21:36:50 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> The barter origins of money |
Message text written by Felix Stalder >> Exchange is more than the interplay of private interests, more >> than the coercion of state laws. It is the way that human beings reconcile >> their individuality with belonging to others in society. >"Not even capitalism, despite its ostensible organization by and for >pragmatic advantage, can escape this cultural constitution of an apparently >objective praxis. For, as Marx also taught, all production, even where it >is governed by the commodity-form, by exchange-value, remains the >production of use-values. Without consumption, the object does not complete >itself as a product: a house left unoccupied is no house. Yet, use-values >cannot be specifically understood on the natural level of 'needs' and >'wants' -- precisely because men do not merely produce 'housing' or >'shelter': they produce a dwelling of definite sorts, a peasant's hut or a >nobleman's castle. This determination of use-values, of a particular type >of house as a particular type of home, represents a continuous process of >social life in which men reciprocally define objects in terms of themselves >and themselves in terms of objects." >Marshall Sahlins: La Pensee Bourgeoise. 1976 (2000) It is true that exchange involves subject-object relations as well as those linking individuals to society. There is a lot to like about Sahlins' cultural approach, as expressed above and more fully in the essay cited , to be found in his wonderful recent collection, Culture and Practice (Zone, 2000). Moreover a strategic focus on material objects as symbols of social relations has been developed very profitably in anthropology, history of science and other disciplines following the work of Appadurai, Latour and Callon, Miller etc. Marcel Mauss, who was the inspiration for the first quote above, certainly recognised that capitalist markets had made both the social and the personal or spiritual aspects of exchange invisible. It is less obvious that Marx could be recruited as a source for this idea, since, from the very beginning of Capital, he rejected consumption of use values as a basis for the social analysis of commodity exchange and hence of capitalism. It seems different to us now, but remember that he was writing at a time when the price of corn was taken as a useful proxy for the value of workers' wages. And of course the consumptionist emphasis expressed so eloquently in the Sahlins quote has itself been attacked from the left, most recently in a new book by David Graeber, Toward an Anthropological Theory of Value (Palgrave, 2001). I'm with Sahlins and Mauss and the Marx of Grundrisse who so brilliantly demolished the hierarchy of production and consumption that he chose to endorse in Capital. Keith Hart # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net