nettime's_high-level_scriptor on Wed, 5 Jun 2002 08:53:06 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> hAxx0r |<|_/-\55 d!gest!!! [wark, henwood] |
"McKenzie Wark" <mckenziewark@hotmail.com> hacker class, further considderations Doug Henwood <dhenwood@panix.com> Re: <nettime> on material and 'immaterial' labour - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - From: "McKenzie Wark" <mckenziewark@hotmail.com> Subject: hacker class, further considderations Date: Tue, 04 Jun 2002 04:51:00 -0400 Further Considerations on the Hacker Class {response to nettime contributors) McKenzie Wark <mw35@nyu.edu> Anyone proposing a new theory of class is always going to have to spend more time resisting misinterpretations than actually advancing the theory, so, here goes. The hacker class produces what is realized in the form of intellectual property, but does not own the means for realizing its value. As Diane McCarty says, "maybe we are all hackers and we don't know it." Yes indeed. And as Pit Schulz points out, the 'immaterial labor' of the user is also a point at which value is created. While I find the notion of 'immaterial' is based on a false distinction, Pit is otherwise quite right. The hacker class may indeed include many kinds of people who produce many kinds of value, but who don't know it. It won't, however, include those who turn creativity into property and property into commodification. Bill Gates is a vectoralist. So too was Ken Lay, interestingly enough, when you think about Enron's failed attempt to monopolize the market for the simulation of the oil market. These two classes confront each other, and have for some time, which why it is remarkable that, as Pit points out H+N have very little to say about class and property in Empire, when class and property is where the action is, and has been for years. They clearly see the need to supplement their work in this area. The hacker class has no given cultural identity. It conforms to no representation. It has been the historic failing of class theories to try to think of class in terms of an identity and to make it conform to a representation. Politics is always just as divisive, and culture just as diverse, within a class as between classes. Artists, scientists, engineers are all hackers in the specific sense in which I use the term -- they create what may become a form of property. The notion of the 'organic intellectual' is, as Pit points out, a very useful precedent for thinking about the hacker class. But the hacker class has absolutely nothing to do with theories of 'symbolic analysts'. I agree with Kermit Snelson about the limits to that concept, but perhaps for different reasons. All theories of the 'new middle class', 'symbolic analysists', the 'intelligentsia' and so on have to supplement class analysis with new terms. My approach to class theory adds no new level of analysis at all. It goes back to the heart of classical class theory -- property -- and takes the formation of intellectual property seriously as *property*. Far from being a 'philosophical vulgarity', the philosophical simplicity, or rather, the abstraction, of this approach to class is precisely what it has to recommend it. It is not based on the separation of information from manufacturing, or of a service sector from a secondary sector, or material from immaterial labor. These are all poorly constructed concepts, in my view. They describe appearances but they don't map abstraction at work in the world. The class struggle between hackers and vectoralists is just as 'material' as any other level of the class struggle. I agree with Russell Carter that it would be most useful to "investigate the ecology of these hacker processes", although we may agree on little else. But it is important to remember that property turns creativity toward commodification. Not only are the fruits of creativity commodified, but the commodity becomes the fruit of creativity. One has to decolonize the critical mind in order to imagine creative production freed from the straightjacket of value. Beppe Caravita is right to say that Negri is "in reality, only a poet", but we need poets in order to imagine the world otherwise. We don't need another hero, as Lorenzo Taiuti says. But the rhizomic production of theory outside of the commodified star system of the academy, in media that permit an open distribution and circulation of ideas is exactly what I have always thought nettime is. One has to begin to write in this space negatively, with a critique of a theory star, in order to edge it toward a critique of the commodification of theory that produces stars, and produces intellectual consumers who need stars -- not least as the vehicles for their resentments. But -- why not? -- 'open source' theory. John Hopkins points us towards the sciences, and indeed the leading pure scientists have been practicing a version of such for years. Science is also "building language-based blocks" for the creation of worlds, and is also in danger of having its creativity commodified and turned away from the discovery of the virtuality of nature and toward the commodification of nature. But if we can forget about the cultural differences between the arts, sciences and humanities, we might see a common interest in keeping a margin of free creativity, at the very least. Or -- why not? -- dream of a world in which the creativity of all the producing classes -- farmers, workers, hackers -- is free. Who really cares what the origins of the word 'hacker' are? Its a good old fashioned English word. To hack is to cut, perhaps a bit crudely -- and isn't that what every truly creative person does? Make a new cut, perhaps not a clean one at first, but one on a new vector. Yes, as Diane suggests, maybe we are all hackers. Or rather, it is the unrealized potential of human social organisation that we could all be hackers. I do not entirely agree with R A Hettinga that "our network evolution follows our social complexity." Not without a struggle, it doesn't. A struggle to overthrow the limits imposed upon our evolution by those who benefit only from the current stage of it. One must focus critique on what limits our collective becoming. See also, A Hacker Manifesto http://subsol.c3.hu/subsol_2/contributors0/warktext.html _________________________________________________________________ Send and receive Hotmail on your mobile device: http://mobile.msn.com - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Tue, 4 Jun 2002 11:58:28 -0400 From: Doug Henwood <dhenwood@panix.com> Subject: Re: <nettime> on material and 'immaterial' labour McKenzie Wark wrote: >Things still get made, but they are increasingly made elsewhere. >I'm surprised that Doug of all people would appear to deny that >manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. Its one of the >great achievements of American marxist political economy to show >1. that this is the case and 2. the reasons why. Most writing on >the topic focusses on the way corporations have used 'globalisation' >to drive down the price of labour. I simply add to that something >that is turing up in the management literature -- the discovery of >the value and power of IP to the contemporary corporation. You >can subcontract your component manufacture to the cheapest bidder, >but it helps to invest heavily in the value of your brands and the >strength of your patent portfolio. This is true for sure, but not the whole truth. It's no longer the case that U.S. manufacturing is "in trouble." The Rust Belt was a fair characterization in the 1970s and early 1980s, but parts of U.S. manufacturing are quite strong. The Midwestern industrial states have some of the lowest unemployment rates in the U.S., and as a UAW educator told me a few years ago, the unions' real threat comes less from Mexico than from nonunion parts plants in Ohio. It was, of course, not news to me that, as another poster indicated, most U.S. workers are employed in services. But that doesn't mean that manufacturing has become economically insignificant. Eighteen million workers is not a small number. (And quite a few workers for temp firms, who are classified as service workers, are actually working in factories.) Many service industries - advertising, couriers, management consultants, janitorial services - depend on manufacturers to hire them. Much New Economy discourse serves to disappear the worker, and the excessive attention paid to IP obscures the fact that people still work on assembly lines, turning screws and stuffing boards. And a lot of that happens right here in the U.S. We even have a few garment workers in Manhattan, still. -- Doug Henwood Left Business Observer Village Station - PO Box 953 New York NY 10014-0704 USA voice +1-212-741-9852 fax +1-212-807-9152 cell +1-917-865-2813 email <mailto:dhenwood@panix.com> web <http://www.leftbusinessobserver.com> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - # 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