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» NEIL SMITH: Well, you're in for a treat today.
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We're going to be talking
with David Harvey on
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the lectures that he's been giving
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now for almost forty years, I think,
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on Capital. My name is Neil Smith.
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I teach in Anthropology and Geography at the
City University of New York
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and David has been a colleague of mine
since he came here
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but before that, a long time before that,
more than thirty years
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I was a student of David's at Johns
Hopkins in Baltimore, and that's where
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I first became
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not aware of Capital as a book, but
that's where I first read through it and
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did so indeed with David.
David what inspired you
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to start to want to read Capital back,
presumably, in the
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very early 1970s?
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» DAVID HARVEY: It was one of those
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historical moments where
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it seemed right to do it.
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I arrived from England,
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fresh off the boat in the summer of '69.
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I arrived into the city, Baltimore where
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in 1968 there had been a tremendous
eruption of violence in the city in
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the wake of the
assassination of Martin Luther King,
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the civil rights questions in the city were
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blatant, the racism in the city was blatant,
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the Vietnam War was on,
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and all the war protests
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were hotting up,
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and it was a very, very confused time…
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And I remember in,
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I think, December of '69
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Fred Hampton got assassinated in Chicago,
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a Black Panther leader,
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and shortly after that,
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in May '70, there were
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the killings at Kent State.
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Huge student strike, millions of
students all over the country
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just went on strike. And then after that
there were killings at Jackson State.
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So this was this was a very, very,
very upset time.
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And I think,
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for me, anyway, there was also a sense
that we didn't quite know how to handle, or
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how to explain this.
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And I've been trained as a sort of social scientist,
thinking about things, and I couldn't find a framework
that would
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really encompass all that was going on.
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So I said to a few graduate students:
'Hey why don't we just read Capital?
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Since it's a book we haven't read,
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maybe there's something in there
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that would work.'
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And so a few of us sat down and
we ran a reading group on it.
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And that's how it all began. And then
having done it once and completely
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misunderstood the book,
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completely misunderstood it.
Now I look back,
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I'd be embarrassed to listen to what we
were saying about this book in the first year.
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You know, it was the blind leading the blind through
this enormous text, you know.
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And we didn't know what we were doing
and then we thought: 'Well we've done it once,
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we better do it again because we obviously
haven't got this quite right.'
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But one thing that I did learn
at that point,
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from that was: you only really begin to
understand Capital when you get to the end.
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It's very hard to start off with a…
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» NEIL SMITH: Yeah.
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» DAVID HARVEY: …sort of clear kind of understanding.
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So the second year we decided
to have another go at it,
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and we had another go at it.
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And I thought to myself: Well,
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this is interesting, now, I began to see a
framework emerging
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that could help me explain what was going on.
So I thought: Well, I should keep at it.
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And there were people around,
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like me, who kind of felt they needed
a framework and so,
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step by step
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I started to say:
well, I'll do this every year.
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And of course one of the things that
happens when you do that, is
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that you suddenly find
yourself called a Marxist.
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I had no idea what a Marxist was,
and I really didn't
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care too much initially, but suddenly,
just because you're reading the book
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and taking it seriously,
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and you want to know more about how to
understand the world through these
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lenses, you suddenly find yourself in this
political corner. And after a bit you say:
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I guess if that's who I am, then
that's who I am, you know. So..
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» NEIL SMITH: Well, I think it might be useful,
since the
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lectures are coming,
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if you give us a bit of an overview,
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a bit of a discussion
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of what you think are the high points of
the chapters in Volume 1 of Capital.
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» DAVID HARVEY: One of the things that
I think is really good to do,
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and one of the reasons
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I've got a great deal of pleasure out of
teaching this course in this way,
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is that many people have taken courses
where they've done a little bit of Marx,
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a little bit of Weber, Durkheim, this kind of stuff,
they've read excerpts from Marx or something like that,
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but they've never actually read it as a book,
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and it's a fantastic literary construction.
So, one of the things that I really want
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to highlight is
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what a good read it is!
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Once you get past the difficulties of the
language and grappling with all these kinds of
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concepts and so on, it's a really, really
dynamic piece, it flows very well.
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And it flows from the beginning point
which is just about a simple idea of a commodity.
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You go into a supermarket, you find a commodity,
you buy the commodity, you take it home, you eat it,
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or wear it, or whatever, and,
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and just beginning with that thing, which we
all know about, it takes you step by step by step
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right the way through,
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unraveling how a capitalist economy works.
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And then it builds around that sort of
insights, stunning insights, as to why we have
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unemployment, or why there is a struggle over
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time, why is it that
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capitalists are always trying to
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snatch time away from you,
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why do we live a life where our world
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is kind of
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orchestrated around a
certain kind of concept of temporality,
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and what the oppressions are
which exist with all of that. So, I think it's
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incredibly revelatory in what it does.
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So, the aim of this course is to
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get you to read this book,
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and to do it as well as
you can in Marx's own terms,
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which may sound a bit ridiculous because,
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since you haven't read the book,
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you won't know exactly what his
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terms are.
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But one of his terms is that you read,
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and therefore you'll get a lot
more out of this class
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if you read the assigned readings
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before you come to class,
than if you just come along and listen.
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There's another reason
for that, which is that
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You have to struggle, always,
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with understanding something.
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And in struggling with it yourself
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you can come to your own
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understanding of what Marx stands for
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and what it means to you. So it's an
engagement between you and this book,
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you and this text,
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that I want
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to encourage.
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In doing that, however,
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there is a complication
which arises from the fact that
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it's very hard to approach this without
some preconceived ideas. Everybody has
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heard of Karl Marx
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and everybody knows the
term Marxism and Marxist,
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and there all kinds of connotations that go
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with those words.
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So, what I have to ask you at the
beginning is to try to lay aside a lot of those
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preconceptions, a lot of those
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things you think you know about
Marx and just try to read the text,
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to find out what it really
was he was trying to say.
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And that, of course,
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is not easy for a bunch
of other reasons, which
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I want to talk about by way of introduction.
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One of the other preconceptions
with which we tend to
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approach a text of this kind is
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out of our particular kind of
intellectual history, and our own particular
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intellectual formation,
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and for people who are
graduate students, for example,
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this intellectual formation is very often
governed by disciplinary apparatuses,
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disciplinary considerations,
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disciplinary concerns.
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And so the tendency is
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to sort of read it from
your disciplinary standpoint.
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Well, one of the great things about Marx is
he would never have got tenure in any discipline,
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and if you want to read him right, then
you've got to forget about getting tenure
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in your discipline;
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not in the long run of course but at
least for the purposes of this course.
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You have to think about
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what it is
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that he is saying, independent of
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the disciplinary apparatus with
which you start to think about things.
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Now, the other reason for saying that
is actually this turns out to be an astonishingly rich
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book in terms of its references.
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References to Shakespeare,
to the Greeks, to Balzac,
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references to all of the the
political economists, to philosophers,
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to anthropologists and all
the rest of it. In other words,
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Marx draws upon
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an immense array of sources,
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and as he does so it might be really
exciting for you to kind of figure out
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what some of those sources are,
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and actually some of them quite hard to track
down, and I've been looking at this for a long time.
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But it really is kind of
very exciting when you start to see
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some of the
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connections. For instance, when I first
started reading this, I had not read many
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of Balzac's novels, then I'm reading
Balzac's novels and I say to myself:
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'Oh that's where Marx got it from!'
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and then you kind of suddenly see all the
ways in which he's drawing upon a whole
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experiential world,
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full of Goethe, full of
Shakespeare, you know, all the rest of it.
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So, it's a very
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rich text in that kind of way,
and you start to appreciate it,
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I think, more
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if you stop saying to yourself: 'Well,
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who is he referring to in history?', or 'Which
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economist is he talking about?' and so on.
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And the other thing that will come
across, if you read it that way, is you'll
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actually find this a very interesting book.
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It's a fascinating book,
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and here of course we come across
another set of preconceptions, because
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many of you will already have encountered
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some of Marx in your reading.
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Maybe you read the Communist
Manifesto in high school.
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Maybe you went through one of those
wonderful courses which is called
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'Introduction to social theory',
where you spent two weeks on Marx,
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you know, two weeks on Weber, a few
weeks on Durkheim and all the other kind of characters.
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And maybe you read
some excerpts from Capital.
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But reading excerpts from Capital is
entirely different from reading it as a book,
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because you start to see these bits and
pieces that are excerpts as, somehow or other,
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playing into a much grander
and broader narrative, and what I think
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I'd like you to really try to
get out of this, is some sense
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of what that grander narrative is, and what that
grander conception is, because that is, if you like,
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how Marx, I think, would
want to be read. He would hate it
0:11:14.040,0:11:15.230
if somebody said:
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'Hey, you've got to excerpt this chapter',
or 'You've got to do this chapter', and you can
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understand Marx that way.
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And he would certainly hate it if he knew he
was being given three weeks in an introduction
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to social theory class.
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And I think you should hate that, too,
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because you get a certain
conception of Marx from that,
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which is radically different
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from the kind of
conception you get from reading
0:11:35.290,0:11:38.600
a book like Marx's Capital.
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Now the other thing that happens,
of course, from the disciplinary standpoint
0:11:43.120,0:11:49.320
is that very often people
start to re-orchestrate their understandings
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around that disciplinary
standpoint. That is, you say:
0:11:52.930,0:11:56.380
'Well, I'm not a good economist, I don't
get the economics in here at all, so I'm not
0:11:56.380,0:11:59.190
going to be bothered to
follow the economic argument,
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I'm just going to follow
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the philosophical argument'.
0:12:01.819,0:12:02.819
And actually,
0:12:02.819,0:12:04.830
it's very interesting reading
0:12:04.830,0:12:07.460
Marx in that perspective.
0:12:07.460,0:12:11.290
Now, I've taught this course
now every year since 1971,
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except one.
0:12:12.780,0:12:17.240
Some years I've taught it twice,
some years I even taught it three times.
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And in the early years I
used to teach it to all kinds of
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different groups.
0:12:22.310,0:12:23.670
One year it was
0:12:23.670,0:12:27.430
the whole philosophy department
from what was called Morgan State
0:12:27.430,0:12:29.949
College at the time, Morgan
State University. Another time
0:12:29.949,0:12:33.690
it was all of the graduate students in
the English program at Johns Hopkins.
0:12:33.690,0:12:34.579
Another year
0:12:34.579,0:12:38.960
it was economists, and this kind of thing.
And actually, what was fascinating to me was,
0:12:38.960,0:12:43.170
each time you read it with a different
group, they saw different things in it.
0:12:43.170,0:12:46.540
And actually, I learned a great deal about
the text from going through it with these
0:12:46.540,0:12:49.670
very different disciplinary groups.
0:12:49.670,0:12:52.680
Sometimes it drove me
crazy, but I learned a great deal.
0:12:52.680,0:12:55.100
One year, for example,
0:12:55.100,0:13:00.930
I ran it with a group of people from
the comparative literature program at Johns Hopkins,
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about seven of them.
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And we got onto chapter one,
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and we spent the whole semester on chapter one.
0:13:11.040,0:13:14.710
It drove me nuts. I was saying: 'Look, we've got
to get onto the working day', you know, and things like
0:13:14.710,0:13:17.029
that, very important issues
of this kind, and they'd say:
0:13:17.029,0:13:20.690
'No, no, we've got to get this right, we've got
to get this right', you know. 'What does he
0:13:20.690,0:13:23.870
actually mean by value? What is
actually this money commodity? What
0:13:23.870,0:13:26.070
is fetish about? What is this really all about?'
0:13:26.070,0:13:27.270
And it turned out…
0:13:27.270,0:13:30.830
I said: 'Why are you doing all of this?'
They said: 'Well, we're working very much in the
0:13:30.830,0:13:33.679
tradition of…' somebody I'd never
heard of at the time, and thought
0:13:33.679,0:13:37.430
was obviously an idiot, because
he was producing this kind of thing,
0:13:37.430,0:13:39.980
a man called Jacques Derrida,
0:13:39.980,0:13:44.240
who spent a lot of time at
Hopkins during the late 1960s, early
0:13:44.240,0:13:47.460
1970s. And so actually
0:13:47.460,0:13:50.890
was very influential in the
comparative literature program.
0:13:50.890,0:13:53.100
Now, one of the things I actually afterwards
0:13:53.100,0:13:55.150
thought about this was…
0:13:55.150,0:14:00.080
What they taught me was to pay
very careful attention to Marx's language;
0:14:00.080,0:14:05.040
what he says, and how he says it, and what
he means, and maybe what he's missing out,
0:14:05.040,0:14:08.160
and that is also terribly important.
0:14:08.160,0:14:12.800
And so, actually, I learned…
and I'm very grateful to that group now,
0:14:12.800,0:14:16.530
apart from the fact that I no longer
sound myself like an idiot for saying I don't…
0:14:16.530,0:14:19.270
I've never heard of Jacques Derrida, you know.
0:14:19.270,0:14:23.380
So it was just very influential
0:14:23.380,0:14:28.170
to have a group of that kind sort of take
me through just chapter one
0:14:28.170,0:14:30.100
with a fine-toothed comb,
0:14:30.100,0:14:33.360
going through almost every word,
every sentence, every connection with the
0:14:33.360,0:14:34.910
sentences, and so on.
0:14:34.910,0:14:38.860
Yes, indeed, I want to get you to the
working day. Yes, indeed, I want to get
0:14:38.860,0:14:41.629
you through the volume, so we're
not going to spend all of the time
0:14:41.629,0:14:43.090
on chapter one, but
0:14:43.090,0:14:46.580
this is the kind of thing that different
disciplinary perspectives can open up.
0:14:46.580,0:14:51.300
Because Marx actually wrote this text
0:14:51.300,0:14:55.890
from those many different
standpoints that I've indicated.
0:14:55.890,0:14:56.610
And I think that
0:14:56.610,0:14:58.280
we have to recognize
0:14:58.280,0:15:03.330
how those different standpoints
intersect within the text.
0:15:03.330,0:15:06.130
There are in fact three major
0:15:06.130,0:15:08.430
areas of inspiration
0:15:08.430,0:15:10.550
for this work,
0:15:10.550,0:15:13.790
and they're all powered forward by
0:15:13.790,0:15:18.940
a deep commitment, in Marx's case, to
0:15:18.940,0:15:22.540
critical theory, to a critical analysis.
0:15:22.540,0:15:27.890
When he was relatively young he wrote a little
piece to one of his sort of editorial colleagues
0:15:27.890,0:15:30.070
at a German journal.
0:15:30.070,0:15:35.360
The title of the piece is :
'For a Ruthless Criticism of Everything Existing'.
0:15:35.360,0:15:40.440
A very modest piece, and I
suggest that you actually go read it,
0:15:40.440,0:15:42.780
because it's fascinating.
0:15:42.780,0:15:45.640
What he does there is, he doesn't say
0:15:45.640,0:15:46.680
everybody
0:15:46.680,0:15:50.800
is stupid, I'm going to trash everybody,
I'm going to criticize everybody out of
0:15:50.800,0:15:51.790
existence. No.
0:15:51.790,0:15:53.760
What he says is,
0:15:53.760,0:15:57.050
there are a lot of serious people
who really thought about the world
0:15:57.050,0:15:58.760
very hard.
0:15:58.760,0:16:04.830
And they've seen certain things about
the world, and what they have seen is our resource.
0:16:04.830,0:16:09.540
What the critical method does
is to take what they have seen, and
0:16:09.540,0:16:15.080
to work on it and to transform
it into something different.
0:16:15.080,0:16:18.200
And one of the things he later said,
which I think captures his method
0:16:18.200,0:16:19.750
admirably, is:
0:16:19.750,0:16:24.220
he says the way in which you
do that transformation is you take
0:16:24.220,0:16:26.699
radically different conceptual blocks
0:16:26.699,0:16:32.370
and you rub them together,
and you make revolutionary fire.
0:16:32.370,0:16:36.790
And that is in effect what he's doing.
He is taking very, very different traditions,
0:16:36.790,0:16:38.340
pushing them together,
0:16:38.340,0:16:39.800
rubbing them together,
0:16:39.800,0:16:43.960
and creating a completely
new framework of knowledge.
0:16:43.960,0:16:47.790
And as he says in one of his introductory
0:16:49.670,0:16:52.350
prefaces, he says: if you're trying to
create a new system of knowledge, then
0:16:52.350,0:16:55.790
you've got to reshape the whole conceptual apparatus.
0:16:55.790,0:17:00.590
You've got to reshape the whole method of inquiry.
0:17:00.590,0:17:04.939
Now, the three conceptual blocks
that he rubs together in Capital
0:17:04.939,0:17:07.110
are really these:
0:17:07.110,0:17:09.579
First there is the conceptual block
0:17:09.579,0:17:12.180
of political economy.
0:17:12.180,0:17:17.640
Eighteenth century, early
nineteenth century political economy.
0:17:17.640,0:17:20.010
This is mainly English.
0:17:20.010,0:17:22.600
Not solely English, but it's
0:17:22.600,0:17:28.070
from Locke and Hobbes and Hume to, of
course, Adam Smith and Ricardo and Malthus.
0:17:28.070,0:17:32.180
And a host of other figures,
like Steuart, and minor figures.
0:17:32.180,0:17:35.880
And he subjected all of these people
0:17:35.880,0:17:39.730
to a deep, deep criticism, in
0:17:39.730,0:17:45.040
three volumes called 'Theories of Surplus Value'.
0:17:45.040,0:17:48.240
He didn't have a photocopying machine
and he didn't have the web and all those kinds
0:17:48.240,0:17:51.240
of things, so he
laboriously copied out by hand
0:17:51.240,0:17:52.980
long passages from Adam Smith,
0:17:52.980,0:17:54.770
and then wrote a commentary on them.
0:17:54.770,0:17:59.290
Long passages from Steuart,
0:17:59.290,0:18:03.390
again, long sort of commentaries on them.
0:18:03.390,0:18:07.990
In fact what he was doing there
was what we now call deconstruction.
0:18:07.990,0:18:10.210
And one of the things I learned
0:18:10.210,0:18:12.950
from going through 'Theories of Surplus Value' was
0:18:12.950,0:18:16.170
how to deconstruct arguments this way.
0:18:16.170,0:18:18.340
In effect, what he does is to say:
0:18:18.340,0:18:19.979
'Adam Smith makes this argument.
0:18:19.979,0:18:22.770
What is he missing out?
0:18:22.770,0:18:25.030
What is the absence? What is the missing
0:18:25.030,0:18:26.400
piece in this,
0:18:26.400,0:18:28.299
that really helps pin it all together,
0:18:28.299,0:18:32.390
and when we put it in there,
transforms the argument?'
0:18:32.390,0:18:34.470
So political economy
0:18:34.470,0:18:37.750
is really quite strong
0:18:37.750,0:18:38.540
as one of the..
0:18:38.540,0:18:42.760
…one of the pieces in the story.
0:18:42.760,0:18:46.429
Now, I know political economy pretty well.
I've read a lot of that stuff and I feel
0:18:46.429,0:18:50.140
fairly familiar with it. Maybe it's
because I come out of the English
0:18:50.140,0:18:53.260
tradition and all the rest of it,
that I feel fairly comfortable with it.
0:18:53.260,0:18:56.080
And so when we're going through,
0:18:56.080,0:18:58.960
I'll give you quite a bit of
0:18:58.960,0:19:00.850
the materials coming
out of that, in terms of
0:19:00.850,0:19:02.960
where Marx is getting his inspiration from,
0:19:02.960,0:19:05.240
because he doesn't always cite it in Capital.
0:19:05.240,0:19:06.789
An idea comes up,
0:19:06.789,0:19:08.830
which is clearly taken from one place,
0:19:08.830,0:19:10.400
and is very significant,
0:19:10.400,0:19:14.410
but Marx doesn't always cite it.
0:19:14.410,0:19:15.820
There are, of course,
0:19:15.820,0:19:21.420
also some other theorists, even in
the United States, but primarily French.
0:19:21.420,0:19:25.230
So there was a French tradition of
political economy, too, rather different.
0:19:25.230,0:19:29.370
Marx makes reference to that, but that
is one, if you like, one of the big areas
0:19:29.370,0:19:32.920
of his…of his discussion.
0:19:32.920,0:19:36.460
The second area
0:19:36.460,0:19:39.770
is German classical critical philosophy,
0:19:39.770,0:19:41.870
which stretches back to the Greeks.
0:19:41.870,0:19:45.660
Now, Marx wrote his dissertation
0:19:45.660,0:19:50.040
on Epicurus, so he was very, very
familiar with Greek thought,
0:19:50.040,0:19:52.750
and of course the
way in which Greek thought
0:19:52.750,0:19:56.230
came into the German
philosophical critical tradition,
0:19:56.230,0:20:01.340
Spinoza, Leibniz, and of course Hegel,
0:20:01.340,0:20:04.390
and many others,
0:20:04.390,0:20:08.470
that kind of tradition
is also extremely significant,
0:20:08.470,0:20:13.390
and so in many ways he's using
the German critical philosophical tradition
0:20:13.390,0:20:17.310
in relationship to political
economy. He's putting them together.
0:20:17.310,0:20:19.200
And he also drew heavily,
0:20:19.200,0:20:21.980
in lots of ways, upon Kant.
0:20:21.980,0:20:23.760
So that tradition
0:20:23.760,0:20:27.660
is also very significant. I'm not
0:20:27.660,0:20:31.320
very familiar with that tradition. I'm not
deeply trained in that tradition, so those
0:20:31.320,0:20:32.590
of you who
0:20:32.590,0:20:36.620
have a deeper training in that tradition than I do,
will probably spot things that I'm going to miss.
0:20:36.620,0:20:38.970
This is one of the things I learned when I
0:20:38.970,0:20:41.900
worked with a group of philosophers who were
0:20:41.900,0:20:45.600
steeped in Hegel, and all that
kind of stuff, so I got a very Hegelian kind
0:20:45.600,0:20:49.720
of view, of how Marx is
proceeding. I know some of it, but I'm not
0:20:49.720,0:20:50.870
so strong on it
0:20:50.870,0:20:53.140
as I would want to be.
0:20:53.140,0:20:57.170
And I have to say, early
on I had some sympathy with the
0:20:57.170,0:21:00.700
British economist Joan Robinson when
she said she really objected to the way in
0:21:00.700,0:21:06.880
which Hegel was putting his nose
in between her and Ricardo in Marx's work.
0:21:06.880,0:21:09.130
I had sympathy with…
0:21:09.130,0:21:11.870
…with that, and so some of the…
0:21:11.870,0:21:15.929
…the problems I have with sort of
becoming familiar with Hegel, I kind of have,
0:21:15.929,0:21:19.340
I have some sympathy with.
0:21:19.340,0:21:23.760
In fact, I jokingly say, and I probably shouldn't
say it, and I'll upset all the Hegelians around,
0:21:23.760,0:21:27.530
actually, one of the best things
about reading Hegel before you read Marx,
0:21:27.530,0:21:32.730
is it makes reading Marx pretty easy.
0:21:32.730,0:21:37.270
So get yourself a dose of Hegel before
you do Marx and everything will be okay.
0:21:37.270,0:21:38.990
The third tradition
0:21:38.990,0:21:41.750
that he uses, and appeals to a lot,
0:21:41.750,0:21:46.070
is the utopian socialist tradition.
0:21:46.070,0:21:48.570
Now, this is primarily French,
0:21:48.570,0:21:52.460
although there's Robert Owen, and some of the
British, and of course Thomas More, in the
0:21:52.460,0:21:54.100
British tradition,
0:21:54.100,0:21:57.570
who crops up every now
and again in the text,
0:21:57.570,0:21:59.900
but the big socialist thinkers - there was
0:21:59.900,0:22:10.180
this tremendous burst of utopian
thinking in the 1830s and 1840s in France.
0:22:10.180,0:22:15.510
People like Etienne Cabet, who created a
group called the Icarians, who came here and settled
0:22:15.510,0:22:19.050
in the United States after 1848.
0:22:19.050,0:22:25.490
Proudhon. Saint-Simon. Fourier.
0:22:25.490,0:22:28.810
Marx was very, very familiar -
he spent some time in Paris -
0:22:28.810,0:22:30.169
very familiar with their works,
0:22:30.169,0:22:37.210
and if you read the Communist Manifesto,
you find that he's a bit frustrated with their works.
0:22:37.210,0:22:40.780
He doesn't like the way in which
0:22:40.780,0:22:46.800
the utopians are actually configuring some
ideal society over there, without any idea
0:22:46.800,0:22:51.080
of how to get from here to there.
0:22:51.080,0:22:54.810
For Marx, what he wants
to do is to try to convert
0:22:54.810,0:22:58.270
the socialist project
from an utopian socialist project
0:22:58.270,0:23:02.930
into a scientific socialist project.
0:23:02.930,0:23:06.220
But in order to do that,
he just can't take
0:23:06.220,0:23:09.490
English empiricism, English
political economy, those kinds of things.
0:23:09.490,0:23:14.760
He has to recreate, reconfigure
0:23:14.760,0:23:17.870
what scientific method is all about.
0:23:17.870,0:23:21.970
And his scientific method is therefore
0:23:21.970,0:23:25.780
predicated very much on this
0:23:25.780,0:23:29.490
interrogation of, if you like,
the mainly English
0:23:29.490,0:23:32.190
tradition of classical political economy,
0:23:32.190,0:23:36.000
with the mainly German
tradition of critical philosophy,
0:23:36.000,0:23:39.500
with, if you like,
the utopian impulse,
0:23:39.500,0:23:42.559
asking: what is communism?
What is a socialist society?
0:23:42.559,0:23:44.970
How can we critique capitalism?
0:23:44.970,0:23:49.660
as, if you like, the third
strain which is impelling him forward.
0:23:49.660,0:23:52.710
I'm pretty familiar with
0:23:52.710,0:23:56.549
the French socialist tradition,
particularly of that period, of the utopian
0:23:56.549,0:23:58.440
tradition of that period,
0:23:58.440,0:24:02.560
and have even written about it so, so… You know,
I've read a lot of those people, like Fourier,
0:24:02.560,0:24:08.559
Saint-Simon, and, and Proudhon,
in particular, and I think, actually,
0:24:08.559,0:24:14.280
what happens is that Marx often draws
from them more than he wants to acknowledge,
0:24:14.280,0:24:18.940
since he kind of wanted
to distance himself
0:24:18.940,0:24:22.030
from that overt utopian tradition
0:24:22.030,0:24:25.440
that was there in the 1830s and
1840s, in which he, in many
0:24:25.440,0:24:31.330
ways, saw as part of a chronic
failure of the revolution of 1848 in Paris.
0:24:31.330,0:24:35.330
Since he wanted to distance himself
from all of that, what he did was to say:
0:24:35.330,0:24:39.820
'Okay, I'm not going to acknowledge them very
much at all', but in fact he makes a great
0:24:39.820,0:24:44.049
deal of use,
particularly of Saint-Simon,
0:24:44.049,0:24:50.390
but also, by negation, Fourier.
In fact, a lot of his ideas
0:24:50.390,0:24:52.490
are kind of the negative of Fourier.
0:24:52.490,0:24:55.820
So you can't really understand him
without understanding who he's negating,
0:24:55.820,0:24:57.850
and he's negating Fourier, in the same way
0:24:57.850,0:24:59.570
that he negates
0:24:59.570,0:25:03.470
several of the political economists kind
of outright, particularly Malthus, who
0:25:03.470,0:25:05.220
he had a particularly
0:25:05.220,0:25:09.740
hard time accepting.
0:25:09.740,0:25:15.940
So, those are, if you like, some of the main
threads that come together in this book
0:25:15.940,0:25:18.610
I suggested however
that we should be reading it
0:25:18.610,0:25:23.550
in Marx's own terms but that also poses
0:25:23.550,0:25:28.220
a whole set of difficulties and Marx
himself was aware of this.
0:25:28.220,0:25:31.510
He interestingly commented
0:25:31.510,0:25:33.850
in one of his prefaces,
0:25:33.850,0:25:41.900
particularly the preface to the French edition,
0:25:41.900,0:25:46.029
when there was a suggestion that the
French edition should be brought out
0:25:46.029,0:25:51.140
as a serial - you know the French
like to publish things as feuilletons,
0:25:51.140,0:25:55.170
that's sort of - a paper comes out
and it's the first two chapters…
0:25:55.170,0:26:00.370
and the next week…sort of a serialized kind of publication.
0:26:00.370,0:26:04.220
And what Marx writes (this is in 1872),
0:26:04.220,0:26:08.270
(He) says, "…I applaud your idea of publishing
the translation of Capital as a serial…
0:26:08.270,0:26:11.570
…In this form the book will be more
accessible to the working class…
0:26:11.570,0:26:17.540
…a consideration which to
me outweighs everything else.
0:26:17.540,0:26:20.460
That is the good side of your suggestion.
0:26:20.460,0:26:22.940
But here is the reverse of the medal.
0:26:22.940,0:26:26.120
The method of analysis which I have employed…
0:26:26.120,0:26:29.799
…and which had not previously been
applied to economic subjects…
0:26:29.799,0:26:31.960
makes the reading of the first chapters
0:26:31.960,0:26:37.310
rather arduous and it is
to be feared that the French public…"
0:26:37.310,0:26:38.770
(and that will include you)
0:26:38.770,0:26:42.690
"…always impatient to come to a conclusion,
eager to know the connection between
0:26:42.690,0:26:44.110
general principles
0:26:44.110,0:26:47.040
and the immediate questions
that have aroused their passions
0:26:47.040,0:26:51.870
may be disheartened because they will
be unable to move on at once.
0:26:51.870,0:26:54.659
That is a disadvantage I am
powerless to overcome,
0:26:54.659,0:26:57.840
unless it be by forewarning and forearming
0:26:57.840,0:27:00.850
those readers who zealously seek the truth.
0:27:00.850,0:27:04.490
There is no royal road to science and only
those who do not dread the fatiguing
0:27:04.490,0:27:06.759
climb of its steep paths
0:27:06.759,0:27:08.150
have a chance of gaining
0:27:08.150,0:27:12.710
its luminous summits."
0:27:12.710,0:27:15.399
So since you're all here zealously concerned
0:27:15.399,0:27:17.830
to pursue the truth,
0:27:17.830,0:27:20.019
I have to warn you, yeah, indeed
0:27:20.019,0:27:25.870
the reading of the first few chapters is
particularly arduous. It's particularly difficult.
0:27:25.870,0:27:28.740
And there are a number of reasons for that.
0:27:28.740,0:27:32.320
One of the reasons is his method,
which we'll talk about in a minute.
0:27:32.320,0:27:35.640
The other reason has to do
0:27:35.640,0:27:40.010
with the particular way in
which he's setting up his project.
0:27:40.010,0:27:42.700
His project is to understand
0:27:42.700,0:27:48.650
how a capitalist mode of production works.
0:27:48.650,0:27:55.159
And he has in mind that this
is going to be a huge, huge project.
0:27:55.159,0:27:59.290
In order to get that project underway,
0:27:59.290,0:28:05.850
he has to develop a conceptual
apparatus which is going to help him understand
0:28:05.850,0:28:11.860
all the complexity that exists under capitalism.
0:28:11.860,0:28:16.900
And, again, in one of his introductions he talks about
0:28:16.900,0:28:20.050
how he's going to go about that.
0:28:20.050,0:28:28.320
He says: "The method of presentation",
0:28:28.320,0:28:31.610
and we're now dealing
with the method of presentation,
0:28:31.610,0:28:34.450
this is in the post-face
to the second edition,
0:28:34.450,0:28:40.200
"The method of presentation must
differ in form from that of inquiry.
0:28:40.200,0:28:43.230
"The latter", that is,
the process of inquiry,
0:28:43.230,0:28:47.210
"has to appropriate the material in
detail to analyze these different forms of
0:28:47.210,0:28:52.510
development, and to track
down their inner connection.
0:28:52.510,0:28:57.580
Only after this work has been done can
the real movement be appropriately presented.
0:28:57.580,0:28:59.950
If this is done successfully,
0:28:59.950,0:29:01.900
if the life of the subject matter",
0:29:01.900,0:29:04.380
that is, the capitalist mode of production,
0:29:04.380,0:29:08.090
"is now reflected back in the
ideas then it may appear as if we have
0:29:08.090,0:29:13.910
before us an a priori construction."
0:29:13.910,0:29:15.809
What Marx is talking about here
0:29:15.809,0:29:21.120
is his method of inquiry is
different from his method of presentation.
0:29:21.120,0:29:26.440
His method of inquiry starts with
everything that exists- everything that's going on.
0:29:26.440,0:29:29.169
You start with reality
as you experience it,
0:29:29.169,0:29:31.500
as you see it, as you feel it.
0:29:31.500,0:29:33.660
You start with all of that.
0:29:33.660,0:29:36.440
You start with descriptions of the reality
0:29:36.440,0:29:40.669
by the political economists,
by novelists, by everybody.
0:29:40.669,0:29:42.919
You start with all that material
0:29:42.919,0:29:46.559
and then you search in that material
0:29:46.559,0:29:49.020
for some simple concepts.
0:29:49.020,0:29:51.380
This is what he calls
the 'method of descent.'
0:29:51.380,0:29:53.040
The method of descent from
0:29:53.040,0:29:54.980
the reality which you find,
0:29:54.980,0:29:57.020
going down, looking for
0:29:57.020,0:30:00.440
some foundational, fundamental concepts.
0:30:00.440,0:30:06.060
And once you've uncovered and
discovered those fundamental concepts,
0:30:06.060,0:30:09.970
you then come back to the surface
0:30:09.970,0:30:13.060
and you look at what's going
on around in the surface and you see
0:30:13.060,0:30:16.980
that behind the world of
appearance that you started out with
0:30:16.980,0:30:22.670
there is another way to
interpret what's going on.
0:30:22.670,0:30:26.070
In effect Marx is a
pioneer in a method which if you,
0:30:26.070,0:30:30.860
you know, if you're familiar with
psychoanalysis you would also, I think, understand.
0:30:30.860,0:30:34.490
That you start with surface behaviors
and you look for some,
0:30:34.490,0:30:37.380
you look for conceptual
apparatus like Freud did.
0:30:37.380,0:30:40.710
You come up with a conceptual apparatus
and then it brings you back and you could
0:30:40.710,0:30:46.210
explain, 'Ah! That person is acting that
way and it looks like this but in fact it's a
0:30:46.210,0:30:48.100
representation of that.'
0:30:48.100,0:30:51.549
Marx is doing the same sort of
thing. In fact Marx is pioneering
0:30:51.549,0:30:54.510
this method in social science:
0:30:54.510,0:30:58.120
Start with the surface appearance;
find the deep concepts.
0:30:58.120,0:31:03.330
In Capital he's going to start with
the deep concepts. He's going to start
0:31:03.330,0:31:07.950
with the conclusions of his inquiries.
0:31:07.950,0:31:11.580
'What are my basic concepts?'
0:31:11.580,0:31:14.480
And he lays these basic concepts out,
0:31:14.480,0:31:18.029
very simply, very directly,
0:31:18.029,0:31:21.860
and indeed it looks like an a priori
construction. When you first read it
0:31:21.860,0:31:23.010
you say,
0:31:23.010,0:31:25.540
'Where is all this stuff coming from?'
0:31:25.540,0:31:29.720
'Where'd he get it from?
Why is he doing that?'
0:31:29.720,0:31:35.880
And half the time you have no idea what
he's talking about with these concepts.
0:31:35.880,0:31:37.780
But then bit by bit,
0:31:37.780,0:31:44.340
as you move on, you start to see how these
concepts are illuminating things going on around us.
0:31:44.340,0:31:47.250
So after a while you start to say, 'Ah!
0:31:47.250,0:31:49.759
'So that's what 'value theory' really means.'
0:31:49.759,0:31:52.390
'That's what the value argument is all about.'
0:31:52.390,0:31:56.799
'Ah! That is what this
fetish is all really all about.'
0:31:56.799,0:31:57.720
'That is what these
0:31:57.720,0:32:00.440
concepts are doing for me.'
0:32:00.440,0:32:04.110
But in effect you only
understand how these concepts work
0:32:04.110,0:32:08.250
by the time you get
to the end of the book.
0:32:08.250,0:32:10.460
Now that's a very unfamiliar strategy.
0:32:10.460,0:32:14.050
I mean, we're familiar with strategies
where people people hammer into you:
0:32:14.050,0:32:17.600
'Get the concept straight and then you go
on to the next one.' It's like you build
0:32:17.600,0:32:21.240
brick by brick by brick by brick.
0:32:21.240,0:32:23.250
Marx is more like,
0:32:23.250,0:32:26.540
you know, dissecting an onion.
I use this metaphor and it's an unfortunate one
0:32:26.540,0:32:27.960
because as somebody pointed out,
0:32:27.960,0:32:31.530
you know, when you dissect an
onion it usually reduces you to tears.
0:32:31.530,0:32:35.320
But what he does in effect is
to start from the outside of the onion,
0:32:35.320,0:32:38.610
go to the center of the onion, find
out what makes the onion grow, and then
0:32:38.610,0:32:41.210
come back to the surface.
0:32:41.210,0:32:45.020
So you only understand, at
the end of the day, what he's about,
0:32:45.020,0:32:48.380
when he comes back to the surface.
0:32:48.380,0:32:52.310
And his argument about what makes it
grow… when you start from the
0:32:52.310,0:32:54.880
inner and you work outwards
in these sort of layers…
0:32:54.880,0:32:58.280
and that's what you do.
You perpetually enrich the concepts.
0:32:58.280,0:32:59.910
Something that seems like
0:32:59.910,0:33:03.029
a very stark and very abstract concept
0:33:03.029,0:33:06.780
gradually gets richer and
richer and richer as you go on.
0:33:06.780,0:33:08.890
It's an expansion
0:33:08.890,0:33:11.430
of these concepts.
0:33:11.430,0:33:15.290
It's not a brick by brick approach at
all, and most of us are not used to that, so
0:33:15.290,0:33:19.520
one of the things you've got to
get used to is that this is what's going on.
0:33:19.520,0:33:21.770
What that means for you is
0:33:21.770,0:33:25.540
you've got to hang on like crazy
for the first three chapters, at least,
0:33:25.540,0:33:29.940
because you probably won't really get the
sense of what it's all about very well
0:33:29.940,0:33:31.039
until you get
0:33:31.039,0:33:33.790
further on down into the text,
and then you start to see
0:33:33.790,0:33:34.950
how these concepts
0:33:34.950,0:33:37.570
are working, and how they… and then,
0:33:37.570,0:33:39.129
if you like, the proof of
0:33:39.129,0:33:42.550
the pudding is in the eating,
that by the time you start to actually
0:33:42.550,0:33:45.440
derive some of the consequences
0:33:45.440,0:33:49.150
that Marx lays out then, of course,
0:33:49.150,0:33:54.250
you get somewhere.
0:33:54.250,0:33:57.270
Included in this is his
choice of starting point.
0:33:57.270,0:33:59.629
As you will see, he starts
from the standpoint…
0:33:59.629,0:34:04.040
from the concept of the commodity.
0:34:04.040,0:34:07.680
Now, this is a very
strange starting point. I mean
0:34:07.680,0:34:10.970
most of you, when you think of Marx,
will think of phrases like 'all history is the
0:34:10.970,0:34:13.089
history of class struggle'.
0:34:13.089,0:34:17.499
So you think: 'Well, Capital
should start with class struggle'.
0:34:17.499,0:34:21.789
I don't know, it takes to about page 300
before you get to any class struggle in Capital.
0:34:21.789,0:34:24.589
Very frustrating for those
of you kind of really want to
0:34:24.589,0:34:27.889
get in there and think about the class struggle.
0:34:27.889,0:34:30.789
Why doesn't he start with money?
0:34:30.789,0:34:33.349
Actually, in his early
preparatory investigations, he
0:34:33.349,0:34:36.089
wanted to start with money,
0:34:36.089,0:34:40.809
but then he found it was more
and more impossible to start with money.
0:34:40.809,0:34:44.269
Why didn't he start with labor?
0:34:44.269,0:34:47.739
You know, he could have started in all
kinds of different places, but he decides
0:34:47.739,0:34:49.109
to start with the commodity.
0:34:49.109,0:34:54.359
And if you go back and you read his preparatory
writings, you see there was a long period,
0:34:54.359,0:34:57.519
about 20 or 30 years, where he
was struggling with the question.
0:34:57.519,0:34:58.859
What's the best starting point
0:34:58.859,0:35:00.479
to really go after this?
0:35:00.479,0:35:03.439
What's at the centre of this
onion, if you want to call it that,
0:35:03.439,0:35:05.190
when I analyze it,
0:35:05.190,0:35:06.449
it really allows me
0:35:06.449,0:35:09.579
to understand how the whole thing works?
0:35:09.579,0:35:11.640
And he decided to start with the commodity.
0:35:11.640,0:35:13.859
It's an arbitrary starting point.
0:35:13.859,0:35:17.249
You don't get its logic. He doesn't
explain it. He doesn't even bother to
0:35:17.249,0:35:19.779
try and persuade you about it.
He just says:
0:35:19.779,0:35:23.639
'This is where I start. This is how I
start to think about it. These are the concepts
0:35:23.639,0:35:27.249
I'm going to use.'
0:35:27.249,0:35:31.979
Very cryptic kind of beginning to the whole
thing. He doesn't attempt any kind of persuasion at all.
0:35:31.979,0:35:35.619
At that point you kind of say: 'Well, you know, if
there's no justification for this, why don't I
0:35:35.619,0:35:37.069
lay the text aside?'
0:35:37.069,0:35:39.420
Then the thing starts to
get a little complicated.
0:35:39.420,0:35:44.209
By the time you get to chapter three, which
is where most people who read Capital stop reading it,
0:35:44.209,0:35:46.230
if they're trying to read it on their own,
0:35:46.230,0:35:49.970
by the time you get to chapter three,
you kind of say: 'This is impossible. This is not
0:35:49.970,0:35:50.909
going anywhere.'
0:35:50.909,0:35:55.239
So it's really hard,
for those kinds of reasons.
0:35:55.239,0:36:00.309
The other reason it's hard is because,
0:36:00.309,0:36:04.179
as I suggested, the
conceptual apparatus is meant
0:36:04.179,0:36:07.039
not just to deal with Capital Volume 1.
0:36:07.039,0:36:08.549
It's meant to
0:36:08.549,0:36:13.519
take him all the way, in terms of all the
other things he wanted to think about.
0:36:13.519,0:36:18.009
Now, you'll be distressed to know
that there are three volumes of Capital.
0:36:18.009,0:36:21.189
So if you really want to
understand the capitalist mode of production,
0:36:21.189,0:36:24.109
you have to read the three volumes of Capital.
0:36:24.109,0:36:28.229
Volume 1 is just one particular perspective on
0:36:28.229,0:36:30.199
the capitalist mode of production,
0:36:30.199,0:36:36.019
but even worse, the three volumes of Capital
are only about an eighth of what he had in mind.
0:36:36.019,0:36:39.849
Here's what he wrote in
a text called the Grundrisse,
0:36:39.849,0:36:44.389
which is a preparatory text, where
he's setting out various designs for Capital.
0:36:44.389,0:36:45.649
He says: 'Okay,
0:36:45.649,0:36:50.229
what I'm going to do is to go through
0:36:50.229,0:36:51.719
the analysis as follows:
0:36:51.719,0:36:55.999
We're going to deal with: "1) The general
abstract determinants which obtain more
0:36:55.999,0:37:01.049
or less in all forms of society.
0:37:01.049,0:37:04.599
2) The categories which make up the
inner structure of bourgeois society,
0:37:04.599,0:37:08.079
and on which the fundamental
classes rest: capital,
0:37:08.079,0:37:12.899
wage labor, landed property, their interrelation.
0:37:12.899,0:37:14.669
Town and Country.
0:37:14.669,0:37:17.409
The three great social classes;
0:37:17.409,0:37:19.299
exchange between them.
0:37:19.299,0:37:20.519
Circulation.
0:37:20.519,0:37:22.599
The credit system."
0:37:22.599,0:37:24.489
Good topic right now.
0:37:24.489,0:37:27.759
"Private.
0:37:27.759,0:37:31.650
3) Concentration of bourgeois society in
the form of the state,
0:37:31.650,0:37:34.249
viewed in relation to itself.
0:37:34.249,0:37:36.909
The unproductive classes.
0:37:36.909,0:37:38.160
Taxes,
0:37:38.160,0:37:39.499
State debt.
0:37:39.499,0:37:41.059
Public credit.
0:37:41.059,0:37:42.709
The population.
0:37:42.709,0:37:44.180
The colonies.
0:37:44.180,0:37:47.699
Emigration.
0:37:47.699,0:37:50.969
4) The international relations of
production,
0:37:50.969,0:37:52.869
international division of labor,
0:37:52.869,0:37:54.589
international exchange,
0:37:54.589,0:37:56.039
export and import,
0:37:56.039,0:37:57.230
rate of exchange,"
0:37:57.230,0:38:01.359
another good topic.
0:38:01.359,0:38:02.209
"Fifth," excellent topic,
0:38:02.209,0:38:07.759
"The world market and crises.'"
0:38:07.759,0:38:08.440
So this is, if you like,
0:38:08.440,0:38:12.330
the panorama he laid out in the
Grundrisse of what it was he wanted to do.
0:38:12.330,0:38:14.799
This is what he had in mind,
0:38:14.799,0:38:17.779
that he was going to do,
0:38:17.779,0:38:20.489
when he wrote Capital.
0:38:20.489,0:38:22.279
He never finished it.
0:38:22.279,0:38:24.259
He never took up
0:38:24.259,0:38:26.390
most of those topics.
0:38:26.390,0:38:27.940
So what you have in Capital
0:38:27.940,0:38:29.999
is the beginning
0:38:29.999,0:38:33.449
of this massive kind of project,
0:38:33.449,0:38:35.639
a massive project which
0:38:35.639,0:38:37.360
he hinted at in lots
0:38:37.360,0:38:41.950
of places about, you know, how to
understand the state, how to understand
0:38:41.950,0:38:46.849
civil society, how to understand
emigration, how to understand
0:38:46.849,0:38:52.759
currency exchanges, and things like that.
0:38:52.759,0:38:56.979
So, here too, we have to understand both that
0:38:56.979,0:39:00.109
the conceptual apparatus
0:39:00.109,0:39:02.119
at the beginning, is…
0:39:02.119,0:39:06.709
he's really trying to design it in such
a way that it bears the burden of all of that,
0:39:06.709,0:39:08.890
but in fact, what it then does,
0:39:08.890,0:39:12.699
is it provides the
framework within which Volume 1
0:39:12.699,0:39:14.020
operates, and Volume 1
0:39:14.020,0:39:17.569
is just one single piece of this whole
0:39:17.569,0:39:19.719
puzzle that he's laid out.
0:39:19.719,0:39:24.229
Volume 1 is really essentially
looking at the capitalist mode of production
0:39:24.229,0:39:27.839
from the standpoint of production,
0:39:27.839,0:39:29.659
not of the market,
0:39:29.659,0:39:34.279
not of global trade, but
the standpoint of production.
0:39:34.279,0:39:37.149
So you're going to have to recognize
that what you're going to get out of this
0:39:37.149,0:39:41.190
course is an analysis, by Marx,
0:39:41.190,0:39:46.949
of a capitalist mode of
production from the perspective of production.
0:39:46.949,0:39:50.459
Volume 2 does the perspective of exchange.
0:39:50.459,0:39:55.099
Volume 3 does materials about crisis formation,
0:39:55.099,0:39:59.959
and also rules of distribution,
0:39:59.959,0:40:02.829
interest, rent, taxes,
0:40:02.829,0:40:08.419
those kinds of issues.
0:40:08.419,0:40:10.929
But then comes the method,
0:40:10.929,0:40:12.839
the other part of the method,
0:40:12.839,0:40:18.259
which is very important in terms of the
method of presentation and the method of inquiry.
0:40:18.259,0:40:23.809
And that is Marx's use of dialectics.
0:40:23.809,0:40:27.999
What he says, again in his preface,
0:40:27.999,0:40:32.190
is that in dialectics we find
0:40:32.190,0:40:34.999
a completely different
0:40:34.999,0:40:38.189
concept of analysis.
0:40:38.189,0:40:45.189
You'll find hardly any causal language
in Marx. Marx doesn't say, 'This causes that.'
0:40:45.219,0:40:47.119
He nearly always says that
0:40:47.119,0:40:51.679
'This is dialectically related to that.'
0:40:51.679,0:40:55.119
And a dialectical relation
0:40:55.119,0:40:56.529
is an inner relation,
0:40:56.529,0:41:01.069
not a causative external
relation. It's an inner relation.
0:41:01.069,0:41:05.259
And he talks about this dialectical method
0:41:05.259,0:41:09.509
again in the postface
to the second edition.
0:41:09.509,0:41:11.619
He says: 'Okay,
0:41:11.619,0:41:21.209
I took up some ideas from Hegel.
0:41:21.209,0:41:24.900
"But," he says, "my dialectical
method is, in its foundations, not only
0:41:24.900,0:41:29.479
different from the Hegelian,
but exactly opposite to it."
0:41:29.479,0:41:31.029
There are ways in which, I think,
0:41:31.029,0:41:34.579
we're going to find that's not exactly true.
0:41:34.579,0:41:38.109
That, in fact, Marx revolutionized
0:41:38.109,0:41:42.269
the dialectical method;
he didn't simply invert it,
0:41:42.269,0:41:45.189
as is sometimes said.
0:41:45.189,0:41:49.069
He then goes on to say this: "I criticized
the mystificatory side of the Hegelian
0:41:49.069,0:41:53.160
dialectic nearly thirty years ago."
0:41:53.160,0:41:58.689
What Marx is referring to here is
0:41:58.689,0:42:01.719
his tract called A Critique
of Hegel's Philosophy of Law,
0:42:01.719,0:42:05.159
Critique of Hegel's Philosophy
of Right, whichever the title is,
0:42:05.159,0:42:06.989
and I think that that critique
0:42:06.989,0:42:09.999
played a very foundational
0:42:09.999,0:42:12.819
moment in which Marx
0:42:12.819,0:42:17.169
defined his relationship to the Hegelian dialectic.
0:42:17.169,0:42:19.959
So he goes on talking about
0:42:19.959,0:42:22.809
this mystificatory aspect.
0:42:22.809,0:42:27.739
And the way in which this
mystified form of the dialectic
0:42:27.739,0:42:29.789
as purveyed by Hegel,
0:42:29.789,0:42:34.729
became the fashion in Germany,
0:42:34.729,0:42:39.759
and why it was that he had to reform it
0:42:39.759,0:42:43.619
in such a way as so it could take account
0:42:43.619,0:42:50.619
of every historical developed
form as being in a fluid state, in motion.
0:42:51.039,0:42:53.779
He had to re-figure it
so that it could grasp
0:42:53.779,0:42:59.910
the transient aspects of
a society as well.
0:42:59.910,0:43:04.859
And he then goes on to
talk about this as being,
0:43:04.859,0:43:09.099
"This dialectical method does not
let itself be impressed by anything, being
0:43:09.099,0:43:14.749
in it's very essence critical and revolutionary."
0:43:14.749,0:43:18.999
Now, what he's talking about here is,
0:43:18.999,0:43:22.639
he's going to use a
version of dialectical method
0:43:22.639,0:43:27.679
to establish relations between
0:43:27.679,0:43:29.979
elements within his system.
0:43:29.979,0:43:32.479
but he is going to do it in such a way
0:43:32.479,0:43:37.299
as to capture fluidity and motion.
0:43:37.299,0:43:41.959
Marx above all is incredibly, incredibly
0:43:41.959,0:43:44.419
impressed with the fluidity
0:43:44.419,0:43:48.739
and the dynamics of capitalism.
0:43:48.739,0:43:51.939
Now this is very weird,
because Marx is often
0:43:51.939,0:43:53.959
talked about as if he is a
0:43:53.959,0:43:57.979
static, structural analyst.
0:43:57.979,0:44:03.309
The weird thing is, when you read Capital,
you realize he sees the motion.
0:44:03.309,0:44:06.369
He sees the movement all of the time.
0:44:06.369,0:44:09.609
He is constantly talking about
0:44:09.609,0:44:14.939
that movement and that
movement is a dialectical movement.
0:44:14.939,0:44:16.710
So one of the ways in which
0:44:16.710,0:44:22.729
also you have to read Marx in Marx's
own terms is to try to grapple with
0:44:22.729,0:44:26.119
what he means by dialectics.
0:44:26.119,0:44:28.589
Because the problem is he never wrote
0:44:28.589,0:44:31.939
a tract on dialectics.
0:44:31.939,0:44:33.259
He never said:
0:44:33.259,0:44:35.499
'Okay, this is my dialectical method'.
0:44:35.499,0:44:36.630
There are hints of it.
0:44:36.630,0:44:38.800
If you really want to
understand his dialectical method,
0:44:38.800,0:44:42.259
you read Capital.
0:44:42.259,0:44:45.739
That's the best place to get it.
0:44:45.739,0:44:49.469
And when you've read
Capital very carefully you will come out
0:44:49.469,0:44:53.140
with a sense of how dialectical method works.
0:44:53.140,0:44:56.769
But again, this is going
to be a bit confusing because
0:44:56.769,0:45:01.249
you're probably not yet used
to dialectical reasoning, and the curious thing about
0:45:01.249,0:45:04.009
academia is that the more
well trained you are in a discipline,
0:45:04.009,0:45:06.549
probably less used you are
0:45:06.549,0:45:08.280
to dialectical method.
0:45:08.280,0:45:10.329
In fact young children are very dialectical.
0:45:10.329,0:45:12.449
They see everything in motion.
0:45:12.449,0:45:15.709
They see contradiction everywhere
and they are quite contradictory about everything.
0:45:15.709,0:45:18.609
Every contradiction goes
into everything else and
0:45:18.609,0:45:19.649
your kids say all kinds of
0:45:19.649,0:45:22.469
wondrous contradictory things to you.
0:45:22.469,0:45:25.819
And you kind of say 'Now you stop
thinking about that. You have to think rationally'.
0:45:25.819,0:45:28.619
So, actually, we train people
0:45:28.619,0:45:33.460
out of being good
dialecticians almost from day two.
0:45:33.460,0:45:38.519
But in fact dialectical method
is intuitively very, very powerful.
0:45:38.519,0:45:42.489
And in a sense what
Marx is doing is recovering
0:45:42.489,0:45:48.069
that incredibly intuitive
dialectical method and putting it to work,
0:45:48.069,0:45:51.400
both in terms of an
analytic schema, as we will see,
0:45:51.400,0:45:53.900
but also in terms of understanding
0:45:53.900,0:45:56.440
that everything is in process.
0:45:56.440,0:45:58.759
Everything is in motion.
0:45:58.759,0:46:01.889
Everything is defined in those terms.
0:46:01.889,0:46:03.879
He doesn't talk about labor.
0:46:03.879,0:46:07.900
He talks about the labor process.
0:46:07.900,0:46:09.289
Capital is not a thing;
0:46:09.289,0:46:13.549
it is a process; it is in motion.
0:46:13.549,0:46:18.209
Value does not exist unless it is in motion.
0:46:18.209,0:46:22.589
When things stop, value disappears,
0:46:22.589,0:46:27.269
and the whole system comes tumbling down.
0:46:27.269,0:46:28.769
And those of you who
0:46:28.769,0:46:32.410
remember very well what
happened in the aftermath of 9/11.
0:46:32.410,0:46:38.619
Most things stopped. Motion stopped.
0:46:38.619,0:46:41.869
Planes stopped flying. You
couldn't get through the bridges,
0:46:41.869,0:46:43.770
everything, and then in three days
0:46:43.770,0:46:47.099
suddenly everybody realized that
capitalism would collapse
0:46:47.099,0:46:50.420
if things didn't get in motion again,
so suddenly, you know, Giuliani
0:46:50.420,0:46:51.099
comes on and says:
0:46:51.099,0:46:54.299
'For god's sake, get out
your credit cards and go shop.
0:46:54.299,0:46:58.019
Go back to Broadway. Go back
and do this kind of stuff; go back.'
0:46:58.019,0:47:01.599
Bush even appeared on a TV
ad for the airline industry, saying:
0:47:01.599,0:47:04.509
'Get back and start flying.
0:47:04.509,0:47:07.719
Get back in motion.' You know.
0:47:07.719,0:47:12.919
In other words, capitalism is, as
Jack Kerouac would say, 'perpetually on the road.'
0:47:12.919,0:47:17.069
And if it's not always
on the road, then it's nothing.
0:47:17.069,0:47:21.650
So Marx is incredibly
appreciative of that. And it's very
0:47:21.650,0:47:25.559
strange to find him so
often depicted as this static
0:47:25.559,0:47:30.119
figure who's got it all worked out.
No, it's in motion and it's changing,
0:47:30.119,0:47:33.929
perpetually in motion.
0:47:33.929,0:47:35.609
So here, I think, too,
0:47:35.609,0:47:39.699
what Marx is trying to do
is to find a conceptual apparatus
0:47:39.699,0:47:44.640
that would help you to understand that motion.
0:47:44.640,0:47:47.329
And so, some of his concepts
0:47:47.329,0:47:49.539
are formulated in such a way
0:47:49.539,0:47:55.450
that they're about relations;
they're about transformative activity.
0:47:55.450,0:48:00.459
This is like this at this moment;
and it's like that in the next moment.
0:48:00.459,0:48:03.369
And this can get quite confusing,
0:48:03.369,0:48:06.599
but what he's trying to do is to get
behind the confusion, come up with a
0:48:06.599,0:48:08.130
conceptual apparatus,
0:48:08.130,0:48:10.089
a deep structure, if you like,
0:48:10.089,0:48:12.180
which is going to help you understand
0:48:12.180,0:48:15.959
all of that motion which
is going on around us perpetually.
0:48:15.959,0:48:20.029
And, particularly, the way in which motion is
0:48:20.029,0:48:27.029
actually instantiated within a
capitalist mode of production.
0:48:27.569,0:48:29.579
So, one of the ways
in which I think you have to
0:48:29.579,0:48:33.119
try to understand Marx is by appreciating
0:48:33.119,0:48:37.209
his dialectical method.
0:48:37.209,0:48:44.069
Now there are a lot of people, including
many Marxists, who really don't like his dialectics.
0:48:44.069,0:48:45.430
There is a whole sphere
0:48:45.430,0:48:48.189
called 'analytical Marxism,' for example,
0:48:48.189,0:48:50.819
which kind of says:
'You know, all of that dialectics…'
0:48:50.819,0:48:52.699
They actually like to call themselves
0:48:52.699,0:48:55.479
'no bullshit Marxists,'
0:48:55.479,0:49:02.599
because they just basically say:
'All that dialectics is just B.S.'
0:49:02.599,0:49:04.030
And then there are actually
0:49:04.030,0:49:09.390
other people who want to somehow or other
take something that's very dialectical and turn it into
0:49:09.390,0:49:12.809
a causative structure.
0:49:12.809,0:49:20.749
And in fact there's a whole positivist version
of what Marx says; that is, strip away the dialectics.
0:49:20.749,0:49:23.959
Now, this may be perfectly correct; I mean,
I'm not making an argument, saying, you know,
0:49:23.959,0:49:27.579
the analytical Marxists are wrong.
0:49:27.579,0:49:31.049
I'm not going to make an argument,
saying that people who turn it into
0:49:31.049,0:49:34.109
a positivist mathematical model are wrong.
0:49:34.109,0:49:36.779
Maybe they're right.
0:49:36.779,0:49:41.029
But what you have to do if you're
going to understand Marx's text in Marx's terms.
0:49:41.029,0:49:45.759
you're going to have to
grapple with the dialectic.
0:49:45.759,0:49:49.139
And it's fine afterwards
if you want a say 'Marx is wrong
0:49:49.139,0:49:52.239
the dialectic is wrong, I don't like it,
it doesn't work', this kind of thing.
0:49:52.239,0:49:53.309
That's fine.
0:49:53.309,0:49:57.619
But before you say that you've got to
understand what it is and how it is working.
0:49:57.619,0:50:01.410
So part of what we want to do
0:50:01.410,0:50:05.229
is to spend some time
0:50:05.229,0:50:08.659
recognizing that dialectical aspect of Marx,
0:50:08.659,0:50:14.269
and seeing how it works.
0:50:14.269,0:50:16.189
Now there is one
0:50:16.189,0:50:19.259
final point before we get to the break.
0:50:19.259,0:50:25.709
I asked to try to read Marx in
Marx's own terms but obviously I am your guide.
0:50:25.709,0:50:27.259
And so you going to read it
0:50:27.259,0:50:32.119
with my help and my terms
are going to be very important.
0:50:32.119,0:50:37.669
So one of the things I want to
say here is that of course my interest
0:50:37.669,0:50:41.339
in urbanisation, in uneven
geographical development, imperialism
0:50:41.339,0:50:44.059
and all those kinds of things,
0:50:44.059,0:50:48.549
that my interests have actually
0:50:48.549,0:50:53.529
become very, very important in terms of
0:50:53.529,0:50:55.659
affecting the way in
which I read this text.
0:50:55.659,0:50:56.549
In other words,
0:50:56.549,0:51:01.529
I've been through 30 odd years
of dialogue between me and this text.
0:51:01.529,0:51:04.949
And one of the reasons
I like to teach it every year is:
0:51:04.949,0:51:09.309
every year I ask to myself: 'How I'm
going to read it differently this year?
0:51:09.309,0:51:15.549
What about will strike me
that I didn't notice before?'
0:51:15.549,0:51:19.439
And new things strike me because
new events crop up, that is history
0:51:19.439,0:51:22.910
and geography change.
0:51:22.910,0:51:27.109
And so, there are certain things which arise,
and I can come back and I can look at Marx and say:
0:51:27.109,0:51:30.400
'Well, does he have anything to say about this?',
and sometimes you find something really acute
0:51:30.400,0:51:32.369
which he has to say about it,
0:51:32.369,0:51:35.239
sometimes not at all.
0:51:35.239,0:51:38.289
So, I have been through a long dialogue
0:51:38.289,0:51:41.849
and I used this way of thinking
0:51:41.849,0:51:47.949
many of these conceptional
apparatuses all of the time in the work I do.
0:51:47.949,0:51:54.159
And in the process, of course, I changed
the way in which I understand the text.
0:51:54.159,0:51:58.079
I suspect that if you could
get a recording of this class
0:51:58.079,0:51:59.759
from twenty five years ago,
0:51:59.759,0:52:01.130
you would find me saying
0:52:01.130,0:52:05.379
very different things
from what I'm saying now.
0:52:05.379,0:52:07.419
For a variety of reasons both
0:52:07.419,0:52:11.259
the historical climate has changed,
the intellectual climate has changed.
0:52:11.259,0:52:15.109
All sorts of issues have cropped
up which didn't exist before. Therefore,
0:52:15.109,0:52:17.289
you read it in a different way.
0:52:17.289,0:52:19.199
Interesting point:
0:52:19.199,0:52:23.649
in one of the prefaces Marx talks
about that process,
0:52:23.649,0:52:25.890
about how bourgeois theory
0:52:25.890,0:52:29.559
understood the world in a certain way
and then history moved on to make that
0:52:29.559,0:52:31.950
theoretical formulation redundant,
0:52:31.950,0:52:34.569
and that therefore ideas had to change
0:52:34.569,0:52:39.769
as circumstances change.
0:52:39.769,0:52:43.179
Or ideas had to be reconfigured.
0:52:43.179,0:52:44.690
So you're going to get
0:52:44.690,0:52:47.269
some of my reading in it, too.
0:52:47.269,0:52:49.370
And there's no way you
can avoid that, but
0:52:49.370,0:52:50.849
at the end of the day,
0:52:50.849,0:52:54.669
what I want you to do, is to come
to your own reading of it,
0:52:54.669,0:52:59.959
that is, engage with the text in
terms of your experience, both intellectual,
0:52:59.959,0:53:03.189
social, political,
0:53:03.189,0:53:05.599
and have a good time talking to the text,
0:53:05.599,0:53:08.130
and letting the text talk to you,
0:53:08.130,0:53:11.340
and appreciating the way
in which Marx tries
0:53:11.340,0:53:12.499
to understand the world.
0:53:12.499,0:53:17.020
Because above all I think this text is a
wonderful, wonderful exercise
0:53:17.020,0:53:19.149
in seeking to understand
0:53:19.149,0:53:21.299
what appears almost
0:53:21.299,0:53:24.039
impossible to understand.
0:53:24.039,0:53:25.900
So from this standpoint
0:53:25.900,0:53:30.919
you have to engage with the text.
And okay I'm going to be in your way a little of the time,
0:53:30.919,0:53:33.139
but I hope not too much
because at the end of the day
0:53:33.139,0:53:37.869
it is your business to really translate
0:53:37.869,0:53:40.089
what's going on in this text into
0:53:40.089,0:53:42.299
meaning in your own life.
0:53:42.299,0:53:43.490
That's what this book
0:53:43.490,0:53:46.490
is so great at. I think it will
speak to you in some way. Probably not in the
0:53:46.490,0:53:49.329
same way to you as it does to me.
0:53:49.329,0:53:52.219
And that is perfectly valid
0:53:52.219,0:53:54.420
and perfectly reasonable.
And I'd like therefore for you
0:53:54.420,0:53:58.549
to confront it in that kind of spirit.
0:53:58.549,0:54:03.799
Okay that's all I want to
say by way of introduction.
0:54:03.799,0:54:06.949
What I thought would be very useful
to do is just to read through this first
0:54:06.949,0:54:10.579
section with you and
try to give you an idea
0:54:10.579,0:54:17.809
what I mean about method and all the rest of it.
0:54:17.809,0:54:20.709
Okay, he starts off simply saying:
0:54:20.709,0:54:23.989
"The wealth of societies in which
the capitalist mode of production prevails
0:54:23.989,0:54:27.299
appears as an immense
collection of commodities;
0:54:27.299,0:54:28.739
(…)individual commodity(…)"
0:54:28.739,0:54:30.079
(…)elementary form.
0:54:30.079,0:54:31.699
Our analysis therefore begins
0:54:31.699,0:54:34.339
with the commodity."
0:54:34.339,0:54:36.099
Okay, this is the a priori
0:54:36.099,0:54:38.889
beginning point which
we've already mentioned.
0:54:38.889,0:54:40.789
But notice something
0:54:40.789,0:54:43.889
about the language: "appears".
0:54:43.889,0:54:48.549
Always watch out when
Marx uses the word "appear".
0:54:48.549,0:54:51.349
"Appears" is not "is",
0:54:51.349,0:54:53.889
"appears" means that
something else is going on,
0:54:53.889,0:54:58.410
and you better watch out and figure
out what that "something else" is.
0:54:58.410,0:55:02.899
And notice also that
0:55:02.899,0:55:05.259
he is exclusively concerned with
0:55:05.259,0:55:08.839
the "capitalist mode of production".
0:55:08.839,0:55:12.439
He's not concerned with ancient
modes of production or socialist
0:55:12.439,0:55:14.339
modes of production or
0:55:14.339,0:55:18.559
even hybrid modes of production.
He's going to be concerned with
0:55:18.559,0:55:20.329
a capitalist mode of production
0:55:20.329,0:55:23.589
in a pretty pure form.
0:55:23.589,0:55:26.670
And I think that is a very important
0:55:26.670,0:55:32.279
thing to remember when
we're reading through this text.
0:55:32.279,0:55:34.519
So this is a beginning point.
0:55:34.519,0:55:36.579
Now, when you think about it,
0:55:36.579,0:55:44.579
it's actually a very good beginning point.
0:55:44.709,0:55:46.209
Why? …How many of us
0:55:46.209,0:55:53.059
in this room have never had
any experience of a commodity?
0:55:53.059,0:55:56.949
Everybody has experiences of commodities.
0:55:56.949,0:55:59.509
Did you see one today?
0:55:59.509,0:56:01.579
Did you see one yesterday?
0:56:01.579,0:56:08.819
Are you constantly shopping for them?
Are you constantly wandering around looking at them?
0:56:08.819,0:56:13.529
The thing there is that
of what he's done is to really choose
0:56:13.529,0:56:16.509
a common denominator,
0:56:16.509,0:56:18.569
something that is common to us all,
0:56:18.569,0:56:20.619
something we know about.
0:56:20.619,0:56:24.219
We go into the shop, we buy it
0:56:24.219,0:56:27.639
and it's absolutely
necessary for our existence.
0:56:27.639,0:56:31.239
We can't live without consuming commodities.
0:56:31.239,0:56:35.169
We have to buy
commodities in order to live.
0:56:35.169,0:56:38.429
It's a simple relation as that,
so we start with that, and the other great
0:56:38.429,0:56:41.309
thing about it is,
0:56:41.309,0:56:44.439
and again I'll probably get
some flack for saying this, is:
0:56:44.439,0:56:48.119
it doesn't matter whether you're a man
or a woman or a Japanese or an ethnic
0:56:48.119,0:56:51.689
or a religious or
whatever it is, in other words:
0:56:51.689,0:56:52.699
this just very
0:56:52.699,0:56:57.619
simple kind of economic
transaction which you are looking at.
0:56:57.619,0:57:00.949
And then he says: Well, what kind of
economic transaction is it?
0:57:00.949,0:57:02.729
Well, the commodity is
0:57:02.729,0:57:08.199
something, he says,
0:57:08.199,0:57:11.849
which meets a human want or need.
0:57:11.849,0:57:13.200
and he says: I'm not
0:57:13.200,0:57:17.599
interested… and this is the cryptic
form of that … he says in the next paragraph…
0:57:17.599,0:57:20.119
OK, something external to us
0:57:20.119,0:57:24.920
which we then make ours in a way.
0:57:24.920,0:57:28.729
And it "satisfies human needs of whatever
kind. The nature of these needs whether
0:57:28.729,0:57:34.679
they arise, for example from the
stomach, or from the imagination, makes no difference."
0:57:34.679,0:57:38.159
In other words: he is not really interested in
psychologizing about it, he's laying it all aside.
0:57:38.159,0:57:42.439
Saying: I'm not really interested
0:57:42.439,0:57:47.269
in why people buy commodities.
They can buy it because
0:57:47.269,0:57:50.429
they want it, they need it, they desire it.
0:57:50.429,0:57:53.789
I can buy it for fun or
out of necessity or whatever. I'm not
0:57:53.789,0:57:56.900
interested in talking about all of that.
All I'm interested in is the very fact
0:57:56.900,0:58:01.599
of simply somebody buying a commodity.
0:58:01.599,0:58:04.279
And he then goes on and says: Well look at this.
0:58:04.279,0:58:09.159
How many commodities are there in the world?
0:58:09.159,0:58:12.269
Well, there are millions of them,
all made up of different qualities,
0:58:12.269,0:58:16.739
and we all kind of assess them in
terms of different quantitative measures.
0:58:16.739,0:58:20.549
And he again shunts this aside
and says: "The discovery of these ways
0:58:20.549,0:58:27.199
and hence of the manifold uses
of things is the work of history.
0:58:27.199,0:58:30.689
So also is the invention of socially
recognized standards of measurement for the
0:58:30.689,0:58:33.639
quantities of these useful objects.
0:58:33.639,0:58:36.749
The diversity of the measures for commodities
0:58:36.749,0:58:43.239
arises in part from the diverse nature of
the objects to the measured, and in part from convention.
0:58:43.239,0:58:46.419
The usefulness of a
thing makes it a use-value."
0:58:46.419,0:58:51.549
First big concept: use-value.
0:58:51.549,0:58:55.149
It's useful to you. I'm not interested in
discussing how it's useful to you. I'm not
0:58:55.149,0:58:59.249
interested in discussing
the history of use-values
0:58:59.249,0:59:02.669
or anything of that kind, or the way in which they
measure this kind of thing. All I'm interested in
0:59:02.669,0:59:04.429
is the concept of use-value.
0:59:04.429,0:59:10.919
Notice how he's abstracting very fast.
0:59:10.919,0:59:15.389
And he talks in one of the prefaces about
0:59:15.389,0:59:19.469
the problem for a social scientist, like himself,
0:59:19.469,0:59:24.789
is that you can't go into a laboratory
and isolate things and run experiments.
0:59:24.789,0:59:28.049
So what you have to do
in order to run an experiment
0:59:28.049,0:59:31.499
is to use what he calls:
'The power of abstraction.'
0:59:31.499,0:59:33.789
And you see immediately:
0:59:33.789,0:59:36.789
the commodity is central.
0:59:36.789,0:59:41.459
I'm abstracting from human
wants, needs and desires.
0:59:41.459,0:59:45.219
I'm abstracting from any
consideration of this specific
0:59:45.219,0:59:46.879
properties of things.
0:59:46.879,0:59:48.949
I'm just going to home in on the fact that
0:59:48.949,0:59:51.199
in some sense this commodity
0:59:51.199,0:59:58.199
has something called a use-value.
0:59:59.180,1:00:03.150
And this then immediately leads him into,
1:00:03.150,1:00:05.279
by the middle of
1:00:05.279,1:00:07.929
page hundred and twenty-six,
1:00:07.929,1:00:11.620
he says: "In the form of society
to be considered here" - i.e.
1:00:11.620,1:00:15.669
within a capitalist mode of production -
1:00:15.669,1:00:21.699
"they are also the material
bearers of exchange-value."
1:00:21.699,1:00:24.929
Again… watch this word "bearers",
1:00:24.929,1:00:27.549
a commodity is a bearer of something.
1:00:27.549,1:00:30.529
It's not to say: it "is" something.
1:00:30.529,1:00:36.259
It is a bearer of something
1:00:36.259,1:00:38.819
which we have yet to define.
1:00:38.819,1:00:41.169
And how do we think about it?
1:00:41.169,1:00:43.150
Well, when we look at exchange
1:00:43.150,1:00:48.939
processes, geographically, temporally,
1:00:48.939,1:00:52.679
what we find is an enormous kind of
1:00:52.679,1:00:56.589
process of exchange, of market exchange.
1:00:56.589,1:00:59.519
We see different ratios occurring
1:00:59.519,1:01:03.489
between shirts and shoes depending
upon the time, depending upon the place.
1:01:03.489,1:01:10.529
We see different quantitative
relations between bushels of wheat and
1:01:10.529,1:01:14.079
pairs of shoes and tons of
steel and that kind of thing.
1:01:14.079,1:01:19.849
So the first sight, what
we see in the world of exchange
1:01:19.849,1:01:26.709
is exchange-values which are
incoherent, they're all over the place.
1:01:26.709,1:01:30.400
As he says: "exchange-value
1:01:30.400,1:01:35.569
appears to be something
accidental and purely relative,
1:01:35.569,1:01:40.079
and consequently an intrinsic
value, i.e. an exchange-value that is
1:01:40.079,1:01:42.539
inseparably connected with the commodity,
1:01:42.539,1:01:50.890
inherent in it, seems to be a contradiction in terms."
1:01:55.159,1:01:56.689
We noticed something
1:01:56.689,1:01:58.990
about this world of exchange. That everything
1:01:58.990,1:02:04.869
is in principle exchangeable
with everything else.
1:02:04.869,1:02:11.089
And what this immediately implies,
as he says at page hundred and twenty-seven,
1:02:11.089,1:02:14.459
is that you are always in a position
having exchanged something for something else to
1:02:14.459,1:02:18.069
then exchange what you've
just got for something else.
1:02:18.069,1:02:19.209
In other words: You can just
1:02:19.209,1:02:21.409
keep on exchanging.
1:02:21.409,1:02:24.839
So a thing can keep on moving.
1:02:24.839,1:02:29.279
So it can be exchanged for all
the other commodities at some point.
1:02:29.279,1:02:32.649
And if that's the case, he then says
1:02:32.649,1:02:35.049
on hundred and twenty-seven,
1:02:35.049,1:02:40.049
"It follows from this that, firstly,
the valid exchange-values of a particular commodity
1:02:40.049,1:02:43.630
express something equal
1:02:43.630,1:02:47.669
and secondly, exchange-value cannot
be anything other than the mode of expression,
1:02:47.669,1:02:53.799
the form of appearance of
a content distinguishable from it."
1:02:53.799,1:02:56.349
That is: if I have a commodity in my hand,
1:02:56.349,1:02:58.559
I can't dissect it
1:02:58.559,1:03:03.469
and find out that element
inside of it that makes it exchangeable.
1:03:03.469,1:03:07.789
It's something else.
1:03:07.789,1:03:11.059
No. It is exchangeable for something else
and I can't find out what makes it exchangeable
1:03:11.059,1:03:13.189
just by looking at the commodity.
1:03:13.189,1:03:15.150
I have to look at the commodity
1:03:15.150,1:03:21.099
in motion. This is where
we start to get in motion, in movement.
1:03:21.099,1:03:24.029
I have to look at it.
1:03:24.029,1:03:24.859
And as it moves,
1:03:24.859,1:03:27.909
it is obviously expressing something
1:03:27.909,1:03:29.180
about exchangeability,
1:03:29.180,1:03:33.139
a commensurability in exchange.
1:03:33.139,1:03:36.479
It means that all things
are commensurable in exchange.
1:03:36.479,1:03:40.640
Why are they commensurable?
And what is that commensurability
1:03:40.640,1:03:42.459
made up of?
1:03:42.459,1:03:44.669
Where does it come from?
1:03:44.669,1:03:47.319
How is it defined?
1:03:47.319,1:03:51.849
And the commodity is the
bearer of that something.
1:03:51.849,1:03:54.409
But it is not inside of the commodity.
1:03:54.409,1:03:57.390
It is borne by the commodity.
1:03:57.390,1:03:58.870
It's a relation
1:03:58.870,1:04:00.379
inside of the commodity,
1:04:00.379,1:04:03.399
not a material thing.
1:04:03.399,1:04:06.569
He then goes through corn and iron
1:04:06.569,1:04:11.919
and gets into one of his geometrical examples,
1:04:11.919,1:04:14.360
but says crucially right
by the middle of the page:
1:04:14.360,1:04:18.769
"Each of them, so far as it is exchange-value,
1:04:18.769,1:04:24.789
must therefore be reducible to
this third thing," whatever it is.
1:04:24.789,1:04:28.809
And "this common element cannot
be a geometrical, physical, chemical or other
1:04:28.809,1:04:33.569
natural property of commodities,"
he says further down the page.
1:04:33.569,1:04:36.869
We're hitting something
here that is rather significant.
1:04:36.869,1:04:38.410
Marx is often
1:04:38.410,1:04:43.239
depicted as some sort of grubby materialist.
You know: Everything has to be material.
1:04:43.239,1:04:50.909
But here what we're seeing immediately: he's not
talking about the materiality of the thing at all.
1:04:50.909,1:04:54.289
You can inspect the materiality of the
commodity all you like, and you won't
1:04:54.289,1:04:55.729
find out the secret of its
1:04:55.729,1:04:58.190
commensurability and its exchangeability.
1:04:58.190,1:05:04.549
You won't find it.
1:05:04.549,1:05:08.869
And then he goes on to the
next page, hundred twenty-eight, to say:
1:05:08.869,1:05:12.689
"As use-values,
1:05:12.689,1:05:15.380
commodities differ above all in quality,
1:05:15.380,1:05:19.130
while as exchange-values they
can only differ in quantity,"
1:05:19.130,1:05:22.779
that is: how much of this
exchanges for how much of that,
1:05:22.779,1:05:27.939
"and therefore do not
contain an atom of use-value."
1:05:27.939,1:05:33.709
The commensurability that
he's talking about is not constituted
1:05:33.709,1:05:39.189
out of the utility of something.
1:05:39.189,1:05:42.999
Then he goes on to say: "If then we
disregard the use-value of commodities, only one
1:05:42.999,1:05:46.869
property remains…" and here
we're going to have another a priori leap.
1:05:46.869,1:05:48.379
What's the property?
1:05:48.379,1:05:52.079
They are all products of human labor.
1:05:52.079,1:05:55.919
That is what they have in common
1:05:55.919,1:06:04.369
and what exchange- and use-values
are bearers of is that quality
1:06:04.369,1:06:09.229
of being products of human labor.
1:06:09.229,1:06:11.599
But, he then immediately goes on to say:
1:06:11.599,1:06:14.159
What kind of labor is it?
1:06:14.159,1:06:16.899
Well, it can't be
1:06:16.899,1:06:20.599
based on the fact that
if I'm lazy and I take,
1:06:20.599,1:06:25.239
you know, fifteen days to make a shirt,
then indeed, you should pay, you know, the equivalent…
1:06:25.239,1:06:27.789
should be fifteen days of your labor,
1:06:27.789,1:06:32.079
when I can go and find somebody who has made a
shirt in three days, you know, I would exchange it
1:06:32.079,1:06:34.900
with somebody for 3 days of labor.
1:06:34.900,1:06:37.339
So he says on the bottom of that passage:
1:06:37.339,1:06:40.339
"They can no longer be distinguished,
1:06:40.339,1:06:43.999
but are all together
reduced to the same kind of labor,
1:06:43.999,1:06:46.739
human labor in the abstract."
1:06:46.739,1:06:50.559
Well, this is moving very fast, very cryptic.
1:06:50.559,1:06:51.349
Use-value,
1:06:51.349,1:06:52.659
exchange-value,
1:06:52.659,1:06:54.889
human labor in the abstract.
1:06:54.889,1:06:56.769
And here it comes:
1:06:56.769,1:06:59.660
"Let us now I look at the residue of the
products of labor. There is nothing left
1:06:59.660,1:07:01.000
of them in each case
1:07:01.000,1:07:03.999
but the same phantom-like objectivity;"
1:07:03.999,1:07:06.609
Marx loves all this stuff about phantoms and
1:07:06.609,1:07:10.009
werewolves and all that kind of
stuff. So you're gonna get a lot of that.
1:07:10.009,1:07:13.969
He's a great admirer of Shelley and
Frankenstein and all the rest of it,
1:07:13.969,1:07:16.779
so you'll get a lot of
that kind of language. It's great.
1:07:16.779,1:07:22.639
"they are merely congealed
quantities of homogeneous human labor,
1:07:22.639,1:07:26.459
human labor-power expended without
regard to the form of its expenditure.
1:07:26.459,1:07:29.989
(…)As crystals of this
social substance which is common to them all,
1:07:29.989,1:07:39.369
they are values, commodity values."
1:07:39.369,1:07:45.420
Okay, he's taken four pages to lay out
1:07:45.420,1:07:46.959
three fundamental concepts.
1:07:46.959,1:07:53.619
Use-value, exchange-value, value.
1:07:53.619,1:07:55.619
Value is what is passed on
1:07:55.619,1:07:58.909
in the process of commodity exchange.
1:07:58.909,1:08:05.629
It's the hidden element in a commodity that makes
1:08:05.629,1:08:13.819
all commodities in principle
exchangeable with each other.
1:08:13.819,1:08:19.309
So he then goes on to say:
Well, having abstracted from use-value
1:08:19.309,1:08:22.999
then we go back and
look again at exchange-value.
1:08:22.999,1:08:26.929
We then see exchange-value, as he says,
on the bottom of page hundred and twenty-eight,
1:08:26.929,1:08:29.289
"as the necessary mode of expression,
1:08:29.289,1:08:34.219
or form of appearance, of value."
1:08:34.219,1:08:37.650
Appearance, form of appearance; but
this time you're looking at it the other way.
1:08:37.650,1:08:42.049
That is there is something mysterious about
the exchangeability of all of those commodities.
1:08:42.049,1:08:47.759
There is something mysterious
about the way in which
1:08:47.759,1:08:52.639
all of those commodities could
be commensurable with each other.
1:08:52.639,1:08:56.389
And the mystery is that they're values,
1:08:56.389,1:08:58.560
But values are represented now
1:08:58.560,1:09:01.330
by exchange-value, so exchange-value,
1:09:01.330,1:09:03.069
i.e. how much you are actually get for
1:09:03.069,1:09:04.549
the product in the market,
1:09:04.549,1:09:06.250
is a representation of value,
1:09:06.250,1:09:10.749
is a representation of labor.
1:09:10.749,1:09:13.909
Now, when you go to the supermarket,
1:09:13.909,1:09:17.859
can you see the labor in the commodity?
1:09:17.859,1:09:21.719
But it has an exchange-value, right?
1:09:21.719,1:09:22.859
Again, Marx's point is:
1:09:22.859,1:09:26.969
Yeah, they are products of
labor but you can't see the labor,
1:09:26.969,1:09:29.499
you can't see the labor on the commodity.
1:09:29.499,1:09:34.949
But you get a sense of what it is
because it is represented by its price.
1:09:34.949,1:09:36.659
So that is, if you like,
1:09:36.659,1:09:42.269
exchange-value is a
representation of something else.
1:09:42.269,1:09:47.670
Now again: to say something is a
representation of something is not to say "is".
1:09:47.670,1:09:48.830
Because, as anybody would
1:09:48.830,1:09:52.170
quickly tell you, the difference
between the representation and what
1:09:52.170,1:09:55.710
actually something is, there can be quite a gap.
And Marx is going to spend quite a bit of
1:09:55.710,1:09:59.400
time talking about the nature of that gap between
1:09:59.400,1:10:06.400
value and its representation.
1:10:08.659,1:10:12.329
On hundred twenty-nine he says:
1:10:12.329,1:10:15.659
"A use-value, or useful article,
1:10:15.659,1:10:19.959
therefore, has value only because
abstract human labor is objectified
1:10:19.959,1:10:26.959
or materialized in it."
1:10:26.959,1:10:30.910
Objectified - a very important kind of concept.
1:10:30.910,1:10:37.619
A process, in fact a labor process,
becomes objectified in a thing.
1:10:37.619,1:10:42.630
This is an idea that's going to
become very important in Marx.
1:10:42.630,1:10:44.659
You have a thing
1:10:44.659,1:10:46.659
and then there is a labor process.
1:10:46.659,1:10:48.360
What's the relationship then
1:10:48.360,1:10:51.370
between the process and the thing?
This is going to come up
1:10:51.370,1:10:56.809
again and again and again in the text.
1:10:56.809,1:10:59.250
Processes and things,
1:10:59.250,1:11:05.409
the thing is a representation of the process.
1:11:05.409,1:11:07.849
You want a simple example of that?
1:11:07.849,1:11:10.369
If I set an examination right now,
1:11:10.369,1:11:13.909
I made you write out little
paper about what these concepts mean.
1:11:13.909,1:11:15.169
And then I graded you.
1:11:15.169,1:11:19.030
I'll be grading you on the thing.
1:11:19.030,1:11:23.790
What would it have to do with the
process that's going on in here?
1:11:23.790,1:11:28.150
I mean you might feel very, very outraged
1:11:28.150,1:11:33.849
when I graded you C or D or F, or something
like that, because you haven't quite got it yet.
1:11:33.849,1:11:37.149
When in fact you're struggling in the process,
1:11:37.149,1:11:41.909
the intellectual labor-process of trying
to command on what the hell is going on in this text.
1:11:41.909,1:11:43.959
It's a very important thing.
1:11:43.959,1:11:48.719
But if I try to test it as a thing…and actually,
1:11:48.719,1:11:52.119
education is full of this kind of problem.
1:11:52.119,1:11:54.249
Education is about a process,
1:11:54.249,1:11:58.599
it's about people learning things,
it's about process, thinking, all this kind of stuff.
1:11:58.599,1:12:02.149
And we are constantly testing how good
people are in terms of that process by the
1:12:02.149,1:12:04.029
things they make.
1:12:04.029,1:12:09.360
Dissertations, essays, papers,
1:12:09.360,1:12:12.669
multiple choice questions, all the rest of it.
1:12:12.669,1:12:16.320
So what Marx is doing here
is to say: Well, the representation,
1:12:16.320,1:12:18.469
i.e. the exchange-value,
1:12:18.469,1:12:21.960
is something which you can
really see, but it is
1:12:21.960,1:12:25.419
representing something which is value.
1:12:25.419,1:12:32.389
And as we will see, value is always in motion.
1:12:32.389,1:12:37.900
And that means that a
process is objectified in a thing.
1:12:37.900,1:12:40.980
A labor process, a potter making a pot
1:12:40.980,1:12:44.150
is finally objectified in a thing. And
it's the thing which is sold in the
1:12:44.150,1:12:47.000
market, not the process.
1:12:47.000,1:12:51.119
But the thing would not
exist without the process.
1:12:51.119,1:12:54.479
So the process has to be objectified.
1:12:54.479,1:12:58.059
There are some people who would
love to write a dissertation without ever
1:12:58.059,1:13:01.260
actually producing the thing.
1:13:01.260,1:13:03.449
You may come an say: Oh the process is great!
1:13:03.449,1:13:07.179
…Ah, yeah okay, PhD immediately…
1:13:07.179,1:13:09.560
…but of course, no, you've got to objectify it…
1:13:09.560,1:13:12.550
And as everybody knows who's
gone through this to some degree,
1:13:12.550,1:13:15.889
you can have great ideas and think it is
fantastic, and when you try to objectify it on paper
1:13:15.889,1:13:20.780
you say:
good god, what nonsense this is!
1:13:20.780,1:13:22.150
And so, you've got to…
1:13:22.150,1:13:25.130
so Marx is talking about that relationship.
1:13:25.130,1:13:26.159
That's right in…
1:13:26.159,1:13:27.989
that's implied in this, immediately in this
1:13:27.989,1:13:30.280
notion of objectification.
1:13:30.280,1:13:34.699
Human labor is objectified, materialized in
1:13:34.699,1:13:37.989
this thing called a commodity.
1:13:37.989,1:13:41.849
But then inside of that thing, the quantity
1:13:41.849,1:13:47.849
is measured by the duration
of the labor which is put into the thing. But…
1:13:47.849,1:13:51.969
And that itself has measures, which he said…
1:13:51.969,1:13:57.219
scale of hours, days etc.
1:13:57.219,1:13:59.199
Again, there's a reference here,
1:13:59.199,1:14:02.349
a coded reference,
if you like, to the the way in which
1:14:02.349,1:14:07.830
capitalist mode of production
sets up a certain notion of temporality.
1:14:07.830,1:14:14.570
Time, how does the capitalist mode
of production structure time?
1:14:14.570,1:14:18.060
And Marx is going to make an argument,
saying: you've got to understand that
1:14:18.060,1:14:24.280
a lot of it has to do with
the fact that time is money.
1:14:24.280,1:14:27.420
Time is connected to value in
a certain kind of way, and therefore even our
1:14:27.420,1:14:30.710
measures of time start to take on
1:14:30.710,1:14:33.950
a certain kind of allure, simply
1:14:33.950,1:14:40.950
because of the way in
which it capitalist mode of production works.
1:14:43.630,1:14:50.089
He then comes, down this paragraph, to say this:
1:14:50.089,1:14:56.039
"I'm really looking at
the total labor power of society
1:14:56.039,1:15:03.039
which is manifested in
the values of the world of commodities."
1:15:03.729,1:15:10.729
Now, where does this society exist,
and where does this world of commodities prevail?
1:15:11.469,1:15:12.850
Here you're not looking at
1:15:12.850,1:15:19.519
just one particular place, you're
actually looking at a global situation.
1:15:19.519,1:15:22.429
The world of commodities,
1:15:22.429,1:15:25.889
where is the world
of commodities right now?
1:15:25.889,1:15:29.690
It's in China, it's in Mexico, it's in Japan,
1:15:29.690,1:15:32.190
it's in Russia…
1:15:32.190,1:15:34.959
It's a global thing.
1:15:34.959,1:15:36.780
And he's looking at
1:15:36.780,1:15:39.429
society, in a sense,
1:15:39.429,1:15:42.820
the whole of the capitalist world.
1:15:42.820,1:15:47.679
So he's looking at the notion of labor,
1:15:47.679,1:15:50.639
and the measure of value,
if you like, is going to be
1:15:50.639,1:15:56.110
judged against that whole world,
it's not the specific
1:15:56.110,1:16:02.580
activity of a particular labor in a
particular place and time, now it's a whole world.
1:16:02.580,1:16:05.979
A global situation, even at this point,
1:16:05.979,1:16:08.499
and actually, there's a brilliant
1:16:08.499,1:16:11.719
sort of description of globalization, if
you want to call it that, in the
1:16:11.719,1:16:13.869
Communist Manifesto.
1:16:13.869,1:16:17.599
Where Marx talks about the impulsions
of the Bourgeoisie to create the world market
1:16:17.599,1:16:20.389
and the consequence of making that,
1:16:20.389,1:16:24.589
in which old industries get destroyed,
new ones get created, there's tremendous
1:16:24.589,1:16:26.189
kind of fluidity.
1:16:26.189,1:16:31.469
Marx was writing this in a context
where the world was opening very fast-
1:16:31.469,1:16:35.149
through the steamship and
the railways and all this kind of stuff
1:16:35.149,1:16:39.449
to a global economy.
1:16:39.449,1:16:43.159
And he understood very well the
consequences of that, which meant that
1:16:43.159,1:16:46.059
value was not something that was
determined in our backyard, but was
1:16:46.059,1:16:52.039
something which was determined
in the world of commodities.
1:16:52.039,1:16:55.439
And the result of that
is that we end up as he says:
1:16:55.439,1:16:58.340
"Each of these units,"
1:16:58.340,1:17:03.780
that is of homogenous labor-power,
1:17:03.780,1:17:07.289
"each of these units is the same as any
other to the extent that it has the
1:17:07.289,1:17:09.390
character of a socially average unit
1:17:09.390,1:17:13.109
of labor-power and acts as such(…)"
1:17:13.109,1:17:16.600
And here comes the crucial definition:
1:17:16.600,1:17:19.050
"Socially necessary labor-time
1:17:19.050,1:17:22.690
is the labor-time required to produce
1:17:22.690,1:17:27.209
any use-value under the conditions
of production normal for a given society and
1:17:27.209,1:17:32.569
with the average degree of skill and
intensity of labor prevalent in that society."
1:17:32.569,1:17:36.139
This is his first cut definition of value.
1:17:36.139,1:17:43.139
Value is socially necessary labor-time.
1:17:44.270,1:17:48.640
One of the reasons, I think, Marx thought
he could get away with this very cryptic presentation
1:17:48.640,1:17:52.249
of use-value, exchange-value and value
1:17:52.249,1:17:55.889
was because anybody who read Ricardo
1:17:55.889,1:18:00.409
would say: 'Yeah, this is pure Ricardo.'
1:18:00.409,1:18:08.499
And it is pure Ricardo, with however
one exceptional insertion.
1:18:08.499,1:18:15.019
Ricardo used the concept
of labor-time as value.
1:18:15.019,1:18:21.840
Marx uses the concept
of socially necessary labor-time.
1:18:21.840,1:18:25.420
And you should immediately
ask yourself the question:
1:18:25.420,1:18:28.420
What is 'socially necessary'?
1:18:28.420,1:18:31.699
How is that established?
1:18:31.699,1:18:34.550
He doesn't give any answer to it here.
1:18:34.550,1:18:38.429
And you only begin to get the
sense of the answer of that, when you are way on
1:18:38.429,1:18:40.969
the way through Capital.
1:18:40.969,1:18:43.389
In other words, what Marx has done
1:18:43.389,1:18:48.719
here, is simply set up the
Ricardian conceptual apparatus.
1:18:48.719,1:18:55.829
Repeat it, and in a sense say:
'Ricardo missed something out.'
1:18:55.829,1:19:03.039
It is not adequate the call value labor-time.
1:19:03.039,1:19:05.360
We have to insert that question mark:
1:19:05.360,1:19:07.759
What is socially necessary labor-time?
1:19:07.759,1:19:11.699
How is it determined? Who determines it?
1:19:11.699,1:19:14.579
And that is the big issue.
1:19:14.579,1:19:19.210
And I would submit it actually continues to
be the big issue in global capitalism,
1:19:19.210,1:19:24.279
who and how is value established?
1:19:24.279,1:19:27.729
I mean we all like to think we have our
own values and this kind of stuff, and everybody likes
1:19:27.729,1:19:31.519
to go on talking about values.
1:19:31.519,1:19:35.659
But Marx is kind of saying: 'Look,
there is a value which is being determined
1:19:35.659,1:19:38.469
by a process that we do not understand.'
1:19:38.469,1:19:41.090
And it's not our choice,
1:19:41.090,1:19:44.689
it's something that is happening to us.
1:19:44.689,1:19:46.210
And how it is happening
1:19:46.210,1:19:49.499
has to be unpacked. If you
want to understand who you are,
1:19:49.499,1:19:52.739
and where you stand in this maelstrom of
1:19:52.739,1:19:55.409
churning values and everything.
What you've got to do
1:19:55.409,1:19:58.270
is to understand how value gets created,
1:19:58.270,1:20:02.360
how it gets produced and with what consequences,
1:20:02.360,1:20:06.409
socially, environmentally, all the rest of it.
1:20:06.409,1:20:07.539
And if you think
1:20:07.539,1:20:10.780
you can solve the environmental
question of global warming and all that
1:20:10.780,1:20:13.440
kind of stuff without actually confronting
1:20:13.440,1:20:16.760
the whole kind of question of
who determines the value structure
1:20:16.760,1:20:19.819
and how is it determined by these processes,
1:20:19.819,1:20:22.980
then you got to be kidding yourself.
1:20:22.980,1:20:24.790
So what Marx in effect is saying:
1:20:24.790,1:20:28.699
You got to understand
what social necessity is.
1:20:28.699,1:20:30.550
And we've got to spend a lot of time
1:20:30.550,1:20:35.079
looking at what is socially necessary.
1:20:35.079,1:20:39.539
He immediately points out however
1:20:39.539,1:20:42.489
that value is not fixed.
1:20:42.489,1:20:46.280
I've mentioned already, he's
always on about the fluidity of things.
1:20:46.280,1:20:48.239
He says:
1:20:48.239,1:20:53.989
Of course value changes with productivity.
1:20:53.989,1:20:57.420
"The introduction of
power-looms into England, for example,
1:20:57.420,1:21:00.780
probably reduced by one half the
labor required to convert a given
1:21:00.780,1:21:04.489
quantity of yarn into woven fabric.
1:21:04.489,1:21:07.979
In order to do this, the
English hand-loom weaver needed
1:21:07.979,1:21:10.760
the the same amount of
labor-time as before;
1:21:10.760,1:21:14.530
but the product of his individual
hour of labor now only represented
1:21:14.530,1:21:16.280
half an hour of social labor,
1:21:16.280,1:21:17.660
and consequently fell
1:21:17.660,1:21:22.109
to one half of its former value."
1:21:22.109,1:21:27.690
Okay, so value is in
the first instance extremely
1:21:27.690,1:21:32.620
sensitive to revolutions in technology,
1:21:32.620,1:21:34.489
revolutions in productivity.
1:21:34.489,1:21:38.399
And much of Capital is going to
be taken up with the discussion
1:21:38.399,1:21:41.289
of those revolutions in productivity,
1:21:41.289,1:21:47.519
those revolutions in value-relations.
1:21:47.519,1:21:49.290
This leads into the conclusion then,
1:21:49.290,1:21:51.520
on the bottom of one twenty nine:
1:21:51.520,1:21:55.869
"What exclusively determines the
magnitude of the value of any article
1:21:55.869,1:21:59.279
is therefore the amount
of labor socially necessary,
1:21:59.279,1:22:03.179
or the labor time
socially necessary for its production."
1:22:03.179,1:22:06.479
There's your definition.
1:22:06.479,1:22:12.169
"The individual commodity counts
here only as an average sample of its kind."
1:22:12.169,1:22:13.809
Then he re-iterates.
1:22:13.809,1:22:17.149
You often find Marx doing this, by the way.
1:22:17.149,1:22:19.249
He repeats himself.
1:22:19.249,1:22:22.409
He kind of…figures if you didn't get the
1:22:22.409,1:22:23.979
hand-loom, the power-loom
1:22:23.979,1:22:27.260
example, so he is going to
1:22:27.260,1:22:30.599
hammer it home by pointing out
1:22:30.599,1:22:35.349
that the value of the commodity does
not remain constant, he says on hundred and thirty:
1:22:35.349,1:22:39.309
"…if the labor-time required for its
production also remained constant.
1:22:39.309,1:22:42.699
But the latter changes with every variation
in the productivity of labor." He then goes
1:22:42.699,1:22:46.480
on to talk about this. But, notice:
1:22:46.480,1:22:51.530
"This is determined by a
wide range of circumstances;
1:22:51.530,1:22:57.560
it is determined amongst other things by
the workers average degree of skill,
1:22:57.560,1:23:01.859
the level of development of
science and its technological application,…"
1:23:01.859,1:23:09.989
Marx is very hot on the significance of
technology and science to capitalism.
1:23:09.989,1:23:13.249
"…the social organization
of the process of production,
1:23:13.249,1:23:16.829
the extent and effectiveness of the means
of production, and the conditions found in
1:23:16.829,1:23:23.539
the natural environment."
1:23:23.539,1:23:30.320
Vast array of elements
which can impinge upon value.
1:23:30.320,1:23:35.139
Transformations in the natural
environment mean revolutions in value.
1:23:35.139,1:23:36.620
Technology and science,
1:23:36.620,1:23:39.159
social organization of production,
1:23:39.159,1:23:41.780
technologies, all the rest of it…
1:23:41.780,1:23:43.829
So, in fact, we've got
1:23:43.829,1:23:48.429
value which is subject to a powerful
array of forces, and he's not
1:23:48.429,1:23:52.119
here attempting a definitive categorization
of all of them, he just simply wants to
1:23:52.119,1:23:59.049
alert us, that this thing we're
calling value is not constant.
1:23:59.049,1:24:07.619
It is subject to perpetual
revolutionary transformations.
1:24:08.600,1:24:12.500
But then a peculiar thing happens.
1:24:12.500,1:24:16.659
Right in the last paragraph
on hundred and thirty one
1:24:16.659,1:24:19.849
he suddenly says:
1:24:19.849,1:24:22.610
"A thing can be a
use-value without being a value."
1:24:22.610,1:24:25.979
Okay, we can all agree on that.
1:24:25.979,1:24:29.520
We breathe air and so far we
haven't managed to bottle it, although,
1:24:29.520,1:24:36.449
we're beginning to, I guess, so…
1:24:36.449,1:24:42.219
A thing can be useful and
a product of human labor without being a commodity.
1:24:42.219,1:24:46.039
I grow tomatoes in my
backyard and I eat them…
1:24:46.039,1:24:48.749
Lots of people, even within capitalism, actually
1:24:48.749,1:24:52.749
produce a lot of things for themselves.
1:24:52.749,1:24:57.829
With a little help
from DIY and all the rest of it.
1:24:57.829,1:25:00.280
"In order to produce the latter,"
1:25:00.280,1:25:02.619
that is commodities,
1:25:02.619,1:25:03.809
"he must not only produce use-values,
1:25:03.809,1:25:08.530
but use-values for others."
1:25:08.530,1:25:13.050
Furthermore, just not simply
use-values for the lord, as a serf would do,
1:25:13.050,1:25:18.359
but use-values which are going
to go to others through the market.
1:25:18.359,1:25:20.460
So it's use-values
1:25:20.460,1:25:27.460
which you are producing,
which are going to be sent to market.
1:25:27.499,1:25:32.960
"Finally", he says, "nothing can
be a value without being an object of utility.
1:25:32.960,1:25:36.400
If the thing is useless, so is the labor
contained in it; the labor does not count
1:25:36.400,1:25:42.679
as labor, and therefore creates no value."
1:25:42.679,1:25:47.739
Now he seems to dismiss
and abstract from use-value earlier on.
1:25:47.739,1:25:48.980
Saying: 'I'm not concerned
1:25:48.980,1:25:53.050
with use-values, I'm not
interested in them, etcetera.
1:25:53.050,1:25:56.079
I abstract from them, I get to
exchange-value, and that gets me to
1:25:56.079,1:25:59.329
value. But now I've got
value, but now I'm saying:
1:25:59.329,1:26:03.289
it doesn't matter what kind of labor went
into something, if somebody doesn't want it
1:26:03.289,1:26:08.090
if it doesn't meet a human
want, need or desire, then it ain't value.'
1:26:08.090,1:26:10.949
So value is also dependent
upon it being a use-value,
1:26:10.949,1:26:13.309
for somebody, somewhere.
1:26:13.309,1:26:18.829
You have to be able to sell it.
So what he has done
1:26:18.829,1:26:25.829
is to suddenly bring
back use-value into the idea of value.
1:26:27.590,1:26:30.449
Now, there's a very interesting
1:26:30.449,1:26:31.980
kind of a structure that
1:26:31.980,1:26:34.530
goes on here. Goes like this:
1:26:34.530,1:26:39.909
And this is what I would like you to do: at
the end of almost every section you read
1:26:39.909,1:26:45.019
think about how the conceptional
apparatus is constructed,
1:26:45.019,1:26:47.999
and how it hangs together.
1:26:47.999,1:26:52.380
What we've got here is
something that goes like this:
1:26:52.380,1:27:00.679
We've got the commodity.
1:27:00.679,1:27:01.960
And we said, actually,
1:27:01.960,1:27:05.209
the commodity has a dual character.
1:27:05.209,1:27:13.309
It has a use-value.
1:27:13.610,1:27:20.610
It also has an exchange-value.
1:27:24.989,1:27:27.879
exchange-value is a
representation of something.
1:27:27.879,1:27:30.519
What is it a representation of?
1:27:30.519,1:27:36.739
It's a representation of value.
1:27:36.739,1:27:41.619
But value doesn't mean anything
1:27:41.619,1:27:47.239
unless it connects back to use-value.
1:27:47.239,1:27:50.989
What is value?
1:27:50.989,1:27:57.989
Socially necessary labor-time.
1:28:08.329,1:28:16.820
Now, if you own a house, are you more
interested in its use-value or its exchange-value?
1:28:16.820,1:28:23.820
Yeah, you're interested in both,
you'd like to have your cake and eat it.
1:28:27.469,1:28:28.699
Right?
1:28:28.699,1:28:34.999
This is sort of opposition here. If you want
to realize the exchange-value of something,
1:28:34.999,1:28:37.399
you can't have the use-value of it.
1:28:37.399,1:28:40.820
If you have the use-value of it then
it's difficult to get the exchange-value, unless you do
1:28:40.820,1:28:43.529
a reverse mortgage, or, you know,
all those kinds of things that people did
1:28:43.529,1:28:47.939
over the last few years.
1:28:47.939,1:28:50.830
But notice the structure:
1:28:50.830,1:28:53.719
Commodity, a singular concept
1:28:53.719,1:28:55.599
which has two aspects.
1:28:55.599,1:28:57.750
Now when you look at a commodity,
1:28:57.750,1:29:03.579
can you actually divide it in half and say:
that's the exchange-value and that's the use-value?
1:29:03.579,1:29:05.599
No, there's a unity.
1:29:05.599,1:29:09.260
But within that unity
there is a dual aspect.
1:29:09.260,1:29:11.079
And that dual aspect
1:29:11.079,1:29:15.999
allows us to define something, called
value, as socially necessary labor-time.
1:29:15.999,1:29:21.260
Which is what the use-value of a
commodity is a bearer of.
1:29:21.260,1:29:27.039
That's what it is a bearer of.
1:29:27.039,1:29:31.059
But, in order to be a value,
it has to be useful.
1:29:31.059,1:29:33.160
And of course, on this link
1:29:33.160,1:29:38.199
we'll see all kinds of
issues arising about supply and demand.
1:29:38.199,1:29:43.609
If the supply is too great, the value will go
down, if the supply is too little, the value will go up.
1:29:43.609,1:29:47.619
So there is an element here of
supply and demand involved.
1:29:47.619,1:29:51.320
Marx is actually not
terribly interested in that.
1:29:51.320,1:29:55.719
As he will say at various points, as he goes on,
1:29:55.719,1:29:59.170
what I'm interested in is, what happens when
1:29:59.170,1:30:04.599
supply and demand are in equilibrium.
1:30:04.599,1:30:07.949
When they are in equilibrium
I have to have a different kind of analysis
1:30:07.949,1:30:10.290
and the value of the commodities is fixed
1:30:10.290,1:30:13.869
by this socially necessary
labor-time, whatever that
1:30:13.869,1:30:20.610
social necessity is. So what you've got here
1:30:20.610,1:30:23.939
is something of this form,
which then allows us to talk about
1:30:23.939,1:30:27.849
the value of a commodity.
1:30:27.849,1:30:31.689
We can talk about commodity values.
1:30:31.689,1:30:33.420
We've got to the point where we understand:
1:30:33.420,1:30:36.420
commodity values are constituted
1:30:36.420,1:30:41.159
as socially necessary labor-time.
1:30:41.159,1:30:48.230
Now this is partly, what I would suggest,
1:30:48.230,1:30:53.579
is Marx's dialectical method working here.
1:30:53.579,1:30:59.539
Would you say that exchange-values cause value?
1:30:59.539,1:31:01.520
Would you say exchange-values
1:31:01.520,1:31:05.469
cause use-value, or use-value
is caused, or anything is caused by anything else?
1:31:05.469,1:31:09.530
This is an analysis which is not causal.
1:31:09.530,1:31:15.679
It's about relations, about dialectical relations.
1:31:15.679,1:31:21.119
Can you talk about exchange-value
without talking about use-value?
1:31:21.119,1:31:24.469
No you can't.
1:31:24.469,1:31:29.050
Can you talk about value without
talking about use-value? No you can't.
1:31:29.050,1:31:32.550
In other words, you can't talk about any
one of these concepts without talking
1:31:32.550,1:31:35.820
about all of the others.
1:31:35.820,1:31:39.690
This is what I mean about, you know,
beginning to sort of work through
1:31:39.690,1:31:43.119
the conceptual apparatus of the onion.
1:31:43.119,1:31:51.489
It's an organic, hanging together,
a set of relations, between these concepts.
1:31:51.489,1:31:54.849
But we've also seen, that we'll be
1:31:54.849,1:31:59.369
going to be talking about motion, about movement,
1:31:59.369,1:32:02.639
about the making of things, about labor processes,
1:32:02.639,1:32:08.009
which become objectified in use-values,
1:32:08.009,1:32:13.269
and which become represented by exchange-value.
1:32:13.269,1:32:17.179
So we've got a very interesting
1:32:17.179,1:32:21.270
kind of conceptual framework here,
which is not about causality at all.
1:32:21.270,1:32:23.630
It's about inner relations.
1:32:23.630,1:32:25.590
And by understanding
1:32:25.590,1:32:30.119
then we start to see also
certain tensions I've already mentioned.
1:32:30.119,1:32:31.939
That yes, it'd be very nice
1:32:31.939,1:32:36.699
to have use-value and
exchange-value at the same time.
1:32:36.699,1:32:40.159
But a lot of time we
are faced with a difficult choice.
1:32:40.159,1:32:43.380
Do I have the use-value, or do I
1:32:43.380,1:32:45.380
realize the exchange-value?
1:32:45.380,1:32:50.249
Or do I give up the
exchange-value and get the use-value?
1:32:50.249,1:32:54.609
And those are the daily decisions we
have to make when we go into the market, right?
1:32:54.609,1:32:55.629
Do I give up
1:32:55.629,1:32:58.960
the exchange-value…
money for this or do I not..?
1:32:58.960,1:33:01.730
Do I hang on to the money or what do I do?
1:33:01.730,1:33:08.239
So Marx has set up something,
that is explaining something, OK, already.
1:33:08.239,1:33:14.530
And even as he explains however,
he is not saying: this causes that.
1:33:14.530,1:33:17.250
So it's not a causal analysis.
1:33:17.250,1:33:18.459
This is where I'm beginning to…
what I want you to start to think about,
1:33:18.459,1:33:24.039
is a dialectical mode of argument.
1:33:24.039,1:33:26.980
Which is already revealing something about
1:33:26.980,1:33:31.320
the kinds of choices you
make when you go into the supermarket.
1:33:31.320,1:33:34.429
And the kinds of things
you see in the supermarket.
1:33:34.429,1:33:37.639
You're going to get a representation of
human labor in the supermarket. You're not
1:33:37.639,1:33:41.119
going to see the human labor.
You're going to get a representation.
1:33:41.119,1:33:45.590
You're gonna have to to deal with the
representation as it is objectified,
1:33:45.590,1:33:47.990
and as its value is represented,
1:33:47.990,1:33:52.260
and then you have to make a
decision about use- and exchange-value.
1:33:52.260,1:33:58.460
So this is a way of situating
what people do on a daily basis.
1:33:58.460,1:34:01.970
And you can see that
this apparatus, although Marx
1:34:01.970,1:34:05.679
doesn't take it in the
way that I'm taking it,
1:34:05.679,1:34:10.199
but if you think about it you see
immediately what this can help you understand.
1:34:10.199,1:34:14.219
So you just don't learn it as a formal abstraction.
1:34:14.219,1:34:15.869
You try to put sort of
1:34:15.869,1:34:19.809
meat on the bones of this,
by sort of thinking through.
1:34:19.809,1:34:23.260
Well, what does that actually mean?
1:34:23.260,1:34:28.840
How does that help me
understand things that are going on around me?
1:34:28.840,1:34:33.929
This is the kind of crucial sort of question
1:34:33.929,1:34:37.900
which this form of analysis sets up.
1:34:37.900,1:34:40.110
So my purpose reading through
1:34:40.110,1:34:43.939
this first section is
to give you some idea about,
1:34:43.939,1:34:47.540
if you like, create a model of
how you should try to read this.
1:34:47.540,1:34:49.470
It won't always work for you. But
1:34:49.470,1:34:53.579
what you should do at the end of every
section is: draw back, say: all right,
1:34:53.579,1:34:57.039
what kind of relationships
was he talking about here?
1:34:57.039,1:34:59.400
What do those relationships tell me
1:34:59.400,1:35:05.349
both about all of this stuff,
but also tell me about what's going on?
1:35:05.349,1:35:09.169
In my daily life, in other people's daily life,
what's going on in the market and all the
1:35:09.169,1:35:12.070
rest of it? What does it tell me?
1:35:12.070,1:35:14.880
Is it telling me anything?
1:35:14.880,1:35:18.300
And initially it will be very
hard to see what it might tell you, as you go on
1:35:18.300,1:35:21.499
Marx will start to tell
stories coming out of these relationships
1:35:21.499,1:35:23.999
and he'll spin outwards from this
1:35:23.999,1:35:29.360
into a far, far greater
understanding of the dynamics of this.
1:35:29.360,1:35:34.119
So this is the way in which he's working.
1:35:34.119,1:35:35.630
And I think what
1:35:35.630,1:35:38.499
I suggested to you is that
1:35:38.499,1:35:41.069
you should go back over this section
1:35:41.069,1:35:46.070
and look carefully at the way in which
these concepts unfold and how they work
1:35:46.070,1:35:50.030
in these sorts of terms.
1:35:50.030,1:35:52.550
Now generally speaking,
1:35:52.550,1:35:55.969
I've been talking all the time on this occasion,
1:35:55.969,1:35:58.839
as an introductory thing.
1:35:58.839,1:36:02.359
Rather necessary I
found out of bitter experience.
1:36:02.359,1:36:03.260
But I would like,
1:36:03.260,1:36:07.489
actually, to try to get
you to engage a little bit, so
1:36:07.489,1:36:09.790
in the future,
1:36:09.790,1:36:13.460
precisely because you've
read the text very carefully in advance,
1:36:13.460,1:36:17.239
you doubtless come with
all kinds of questions in your mind.
1:36:17.239,1:36:18.300
And so when
1:36:18.300,1:36:23.009
I'm talking about something and you don't
get it because it doesn't fit with what
1:36:23.009,1:36:26.619
you got, then interrupt me, Ok.
1:36:26.619,1:36:36.169
That's fine, but interrupt me about the text.
1:36:36.169,1:36:40.829
As he says about this in his
introduction to the French edition, you know,
1:36:40.829,1:36:45.729
people very often want to talk politics
1:36:45.729,1:36:49.349
in here, I love to talk politics.
1:36:49.349,1:36:52.959
But sometimes if you talk
all politics you forget the text,
1:36:52.959,1:36:56.280
and actually the politics
of this class is to get you to read the text
1:36:56.280,1:36:58.249
and understand the text.
1:36:58.249,1:37:01.570
If you want to discuss politics we go
down to O'Reilly's bar on 35th street afterwards
1:37:01.570,1:37:04.119
and discuss as much politics as you like,
1:37:04.119,1:37:06.709
over several beers and that's
1:37:06.709,1:37:08.799
part of the joy of this course.
1:37:08.799,1:37:12.819
This is…,
in here we wanna try to
1:37:12.819,1:37:14.520
keep it with the text.
1:37:14.520,1:37:18.909
But there are instances of the
sort that I sort of indicated here where
1:37:18.909,1:37:23.110
people might have a particular kind of
experience which actually is illuminated
1:37:23.110,1:37:26.209
by the framework of analysis.
And that's extremely helpful.
1:37:26.209,1:37:29.449
When people can kinda say:
yeah, that reminds me off,
1:37:29.449,1:37:33.079
you know, when I was working for
AT&T this happened etc, you know, and
1:37:33.079,1:37:36.929
this happened and this happened, and it is
exactly what Marx is talking about. In other words:
1:37:36.929,1:37:39.670
there are constant ways in which
1:37:39.670,1:37:43.520
this refers to experience. I don't
mind some of that, in fact, that's always
1:37:43.520,1:37:45.609
very, very useful, but really,
1:37:45.609,1:37:47.769
what we're trying to do
is try to make sure we
1:37:47.769,1:37:51.400
get through to the text, and we have also
1:37:51.400,1:37:54.890
a little bit more fluidity, so that
I'm not just preaching all the time
1:37:54.890,1:37:57.849
and telling all the time, a
little bit more fluidity so that you can get into
1:37:57.849,1:37:59.329
discussing some things. Now,
1:37:59.329,1:38:02.909
we have about ten minutes left
so if anybody wants to raise some
1:38:02.909,1:38:08.150
issues about what we've done?
1:38:08.150,1:38:13.909
»STUDENT: I was just wondering, because I think that,
in the philosophical tradition, when we speak of value,
1:38:13.909,1:38:14.889
you usually have this conception of something
1:38:14.889,1:38:15.689
that is absolute or that has
1:38:15.689,1:38:19.739
an independent existence grounded in reality,
1:38:19.739,1:38:23.149
and I'm wondering, whether
we can understand Marx's
1:38:23.149,1:38:27.359
definition of value as
socially necessary labor-time,
1:38:27.359,1:38:31.960
as itself, something that is socially
conditioned, and is there any way
1:38:31.960,1:38:34.489
that is totally outside,
might there be a social configuration
1:38:34.489,1:38:37.409
that we can imagine
1:38:37.409,1:38:46.280
in which value is,
1:38:46.280,1:38:49.800
actually itself its representation,
1:38:49.800,1:38:53.689
when those two things are reconciled.
1:38:53.689,1:38:57.159
Or is value always, inevitably kind of a chimera?
1:38:57.159,1:39:00.969
»HARVEY: No, I think you gotta understand:
1:39:00.969,1:39:04.949
Marx's concept of value is
1:39:04.949,1:39:11.619
something which is internalized in the
processes of a capitalist mode of production.
1:39:11.619,1:39:15.380
And what he will say to you is: you may
have alternative values, and that's fine.
1:39:15.380,1:39:19.759
And you can dream about
them and want them, this kind of stuff.
1:39:19.759,1:39:26.219
But they don't mean very much,
unless you can transform
1:39:26.219,1:39:30.760
the real value system which is
governing our daily lives which is this one.
1:39:30.760,1:39:34.760
So Marx is not against, necessarily,
thinking about alternative values. And in
1:39:34.760,1:39:37.610
fact, I think, one of the big issues
1:39:37.610,1:39:43.380
which we face right now, is
precisely about what alternative values we
1:39:43.380,1:39:46.349
would like to see
1:39:46.349,1:39:49.060
operating in in the global marketplace.
1:39:49.060,1:39:52.709
Values of fairness…
1:39:52.709,1:39:57.559
and this is particularly coming up in
the environmental issue, for example.
1:39:57.559,1:40:01.820
People want to talk about
environmental values which should be
1:40:01.820,1:40:04.680
part in this. And the
answer again, as I suggested, is:
1:40:04.680,1:40:06.949
Marx would say: that's fine.
1:40:06.949,1:40:10.600
Well, he might not say that's fine, he had a
particular kind of aim of where he wants to go.
1:40:10.600,1:40:13.310
But I think, theoretically he would say:
1:40:13.310,1:40:18.090
that's fine. But in order to
make your notion of value work
1:40:18.090,1:40:21.979
you have to confront the one which is actually
1:40:21.979,1:40:23.820
dominating us in terms of
1:40:23.820,1:40:27.159
what's going on in the supermarket, how we're
living our daily lives and all the rest of it.
1:40:27.159,1:40:29.840
And we're talking about a value theory
1:40:29.840,1:40:32.059
which is implicated inside of
1:40:32.059,1:40:34.340
a capitalist mode of production.
1:40:34.340,1:40:40.260
Now, there's been a
categorical mistake in many instances,
1:40:40.260,1:40:43.979
precisely because value is located
in relationship to labor and labor processes,
1:40:43.979,1:40:49.589
that there's been a lot of
thinking in socialist societies of taking
1:40:49.589,1:40:54.229
Marx's labor theory of value
also almost as a normative device
1:40:54.229,1:40:56.439
to think about how
1:40:56.439,1:40:57.499
socialism should work.
1:40:57.499,1:41:00.150
But this is not what
Marx is saying, he's saying:
1:41:00.150,1:41:02.179
value is inherent
1:41:02.179,1:41:03.949
within a capitalist mode of production.
1:41:03.949,1:41:06.889
And we have to come to terms
1:41:06.889,1:41:08.879
with what that value is.
1:41:08.879,1:41:11.159
Now, there are alternative value theories.
1:41:11.159,1:41:12.810
And you know, you can
1:41:12.810,1:41:17.050
philosophize about them, think
about them and worry about them, socially,
1:41:17.050,1:41:18.939
politically, all the rest of it…
1:41:18.939,1:41:22.499
But his point is, as I suggested,
1:41:22.499,1:41:25.420
you've always got to come
back to confront this one,
1:41:25.420,1:41:28.570
because this is very basic to how
capitalist mode of production works.
1:41:28.570,1:41:29.119
And if you wanna
1:41:29.119,1:41:31.969
instantiate a different set of
values, then you've gotta
1:41:31.969,1:41:35.300
overthrow a capitalist mode of production.
1:41:35.300,1:41:38.280
And that's his revolutionary intent.
1:41:38.280,1:41:43.530
Sorry, there was a question here.
1:41:43.530,1:41:47.869
»STUDENT: Yeah, I just was wondering if
you could talk a little bit about how we should think
1:41:47.869,1:41:49.339
about objectification. Because, I know, the
preconceived notion I bring to it is
1:41:49.339,1:41:52.219
much more static in terms of,
1:41:52.219,1:41:54.480
as labor is objectified, it
moves away from the laborer
1:41:54.480,1:41:57.030
and there's this separation.
1:41:57.030,1:42:01.509
How can I think about that in terms of,
1:42:01.509,1:42:04.409
more process oriented?
1:42:04.409,1:42:08.270
»HARVEY: Well, again…
the thing is not…
1:42:08.270,1:42:11.159
…is not…, for instance:
1:42:11.159,1:42:13.189
Just to give you an example:
1:42:13.189,1:42:14.639
1:42:14.639,1:42:17.749
Let's suppose that labor produces a house.
1:42:17.749,1:42:20.090
Okay the laborers that
produced the house move away from it,
1:42:20.090,1:42:23.510
then maybe other laborers move in to it.
1:42:23.510,1:42:27.769
And then there's the issue of: is that
house then fixed forever in terms of
1:42:27.769,1:42:32.080
its value? Well, given the way
he set it up, the answer is no.
1:42:32.080,1:42:36.329
Because let's suppose
there are revolutions in technology
1:42:36.329,1:42:40.199
which suddenly make housing
production much easier.
1:42:40.199,1:42:44.480
Then you can go away from, I don't know,
shanty towns to sort of housing of a
1:42:44.480,1:42:47.300
different kind, and therefore there's a dynamic
1:42:47.300,1:42:50.900
involved in this, and therefore,
1:42:50.900,1:42:53.540
you know, this gets back to the fact that
1:42:53.540,1:42:57.699
something like a house has a use-value and
the use-value remains a long time and you can still
1:42:57.699,1:43:00.889
trade its exchange-value,
so it has a residual exchange-value.
1:43:00.889,1:43:02.019
So…,
1:43:02.019,1:43:03.930
so again there's a dynamic here,
1:43:03.930,1:43:05.370
so the thing
1:43:05.370,1:43:07.849
and the qualities of things are not fixed.
1:43:07.849,1:43:10.550
In fact, again, there's a lot of
1:43:10.550,1:43:14.989
dynamism in this. But again Marx,
by and large, is not going to be concerned about that
1:43:14.989,1:43:16.929
in Capital. He's going to sort of say:
1:43:16.929,1:43:21.589
OK, I'm gonna assume it's fixed for the moment.
1:43:21.589,1:43:24.000
But nevertheless, what
he's saying here is:
1:43:24.000,1:43:29.109
watch out!, it's always in motion,
it's never fixed, it's always changing, it's a dynamic
1:43:29.109,1:43:32.429
concept, not a static one.
And the objectification
1:43:32.429,1:43:37.189
is there, but again, the meaning
of the objectification itself changes over time
1:43:37.189,1:43:39.699
and according to place. So you know
1:43:39.699,1:43:45.199
there are all those elements within it.
1:43:45.199,1:43:46.779
» STUDENT: This particular vision of the capitalist
1:43:46.779,1:43:50.590
world that Marx deals with
1:43:50.590,1:43:52.469
diverges, I mean obviously
1:43:52.469,1:43:53.679
diverges with the modern day…
1:43:53.679,1:43:59.539
Specifically with the way in which laws, and
you know, create a proprietary… you know
1:43:59.539,1:44:01.769
only certain companies
can make one thing, and then,
1:44:01.769,1:44:06.690
corporations sort of
1:44:06.690,1:44:07.700
dominate the scene.
1:44:07.700,1:44:12.019
It's not a free market- protectionist laws,
1:44:12.019,1:44:15.800
…does that…
1:44:15.800,1:44:18.959
affect the values being purely
about the socially necessary labor-time.
1:44:18.959,1:44:21.800
»HARVEY: Well that's one of the
questions which you have to ask about. What is
1:44:21.800,1:44:23.989
socially necessary labor-time?
1:44:23.989,1:44:25.800
How is it determined?
1:44:25.800,1:44:30.120
To what degree is there a monopoly
power in the market which is determining it?
1:44:30.120,1:44:36.380
To what degree is there imperialist
politics which is determining it?
1:44:36.380,1:44:38.739
To what degree is there
1:44:38.739,1:44:41.189
colonial enslavement which is determining it?
1:44:41.189,1:44:42.130
In other words:
1:44:42.130,1:44:43.869
those are open questions.
1:44:43.869,1:44:47.479
And Marx is very much open to
1:44:47.479,1:44:49.459
discussing those sorts of questions
1:44:49.459,1:44:53.699
in principle. But again, what
we're going to look at is
1:44:53.699,1:44:57.359
Marx's conception of a pure
capitalist mode of production.
1:44:57.359,1:45:01.449
Which in many ways, as we will see,
is guided by the vision of classical
1:45:01.449,1:45:03.249
political economy.
1:45:03.249,1:45:06.510
In other words: classical political economy
1:45:06.510,1:45:09.969
assumes there were going to be perfectly
functioning markets and the state power
1:45:09.969,1:45:14.070
is going to be out of the way,
and there's gonna be no monopoly.
1:45:14.070,1:45:17.739
So Marx tends to say:
okay, let's assume that
1:45:17.739,1:45:21.469
the classical political economists are
correct and that's how the world is.
1:45:21.469,1:45:23.969
We will see examples where
1:45:23.969,1:45:27.659
that presumption gets him into difficulties.
1:45:27.659,1:45:29.699
But actually, there's nothing
1:45:29.699,1:45:33.320
in this conception that says you can't
consider all those things, because,
1:45:33.320,1:45:36.099
for me anyway, the category socially necessary
1:45:36.099,1:45:38.170
is something which is perpetually open,
1:45:38.170,1:45:39.650
is constantly changing.
1:45:39.650,1:45:41.659
What is socially necessary now?
1:45:41.659,1:45:45.650
as opposed to what was
socially necessary in 1850.
1:45:45.650,1:45:50.099
Very different. And so you know,
1:45:50.099,1:45:52.510
I would want you to think about this as
1:45:52.510,1:45:55.580
having a flexible reading in this,
but realize that Marx is using it
1:45:55.580,1:45:59.219
in a very specific way, in a very specific situation
1:45:59.219,1:46:03.340
for very specific purposes.
1:46:03.340,1:46:06.739
»STUDENT: Does socially necessary
imply the amount of labor required
1:46:06.739,1:46:10.729
for a laborer to reproduce him- or herself?
1:46:10.729,1:46:12.559
»HARVEY: Socially necessary
1:46:12.559,1:46:15.849
can include that kind of question.
1:46:15.849,1:46:19.290
As many socialist feminists pointed out in the
1:46:19.290,1:46:22.690
debates of the nineteen
sixties/nineteen seventies,
1:46:22.690,1:46:26.489
the whole question of socially necessary,
1:46:26.489,1:46:28.650
has to take into account
1:46:28.650,1:46:31.860
certain basic costs of reproduction
that are born inside of the household
1:46:31.860,1:46:35.369
and which may be
disproportionately born by women.
1:46:35.369,1:46:38.429
Even though, actually, if you look
at the whole history of the industrial
1:46:38.429,1:46:40.480
revolution, it was women's labor
1:46:40.480,1:46:44.070
in the factories that was
fundamental, as it is today. And most of
1:46:44.070,1:46:47.840
the global proletariat right now is women.
1:46:47.840,1:46:51.190
So the kind of social
reproduction aspect of it, and how to
1:46:51.190,1:46:53.289
integrate that into
socially necessary, has been
1:46:53.289,1:46:58.230
a contentious issue amongst Marxists.
1:46:58.230,1:47:01.690
And what you have to
remember by the way, is that Marx
1:47:01.690,1:47:07.969
was a little skeptical of this
term "Marxist". He once said: 'I am not a Marxist.'
1:47:07.969,1:47:11.489
What he meant by that, was, there
were a lot of things being said in his name, that were
1:47:11.489,1:47:13.639
not exactly what he had to say.
1:47:13.639,1:47:18.309
So again, that's one of the reasons
why I want you to think about this in Marx's
1:47:18.309,1:47:21.940
own terms. Because, you know,
1:47:21.940,1:47:24.139
it's very, it's very important to realize
1:47:24.139,1:47:28.309
how he expands this
notion of social necessity,
1:47:28.309,1:47:29.679
we will see.
1:47:29.679,1:47:32.889
How you might want to expand it,
is again something that is open
1:47:32.889,1:47:34.479
to discussion and debate.
1:47:34.479,1:47:37.039
How we should expand it,
1:47:37.039,1:47:41.719
in terms of a socialist project, or
socio-ecological project, or a social-
1:47:41.719,1:47:43.070
feminist project, or whatever.
1:47:43.070,1:47:44.899
How we should expand it,
1:47:44.899,1:47:47.730
again, is something very much up to us.
1:47:47.730,1:47:51.609
And I don't think Marx would want to be read
1:47:51.609,1:47:55.389
as someone providing a
gospel within which you
1:47:55.389,1:47:56.590
can find yourself.
1:47:56.590,1:48:00.110
It's not about confining mode of
argument, it's a matter of
1:48:00.110,1:48:03.469
liberating you to think about
all kinds of possibilities,
1:48:03.469,1:48:05.369
all kinds of alternatives,
1:48:05.369,1:48:08.780
all kinds of ways to go.
1:48:08.780,1:48:09.929
Just one more.
1:48:09.929,1:48:13.959
»STUDENT: Could you just
clarify very specifically
1:48:13.959,1:48:15.649
the difference between
use-value and exchange-value?
1:48:15.649,1:48:19.880
»HARVEY: Use-value is a shirt or a shoe,
1:48:19.880,1:48:21.889
whatever you use. The exchange-value is:
1:48:21.889,1:48:25.880
shirts and shoes in the market,
and about the prices on them,
1:48:25.880,1:48:30.099
put very simply. And it's…
1:48:30.099,1:48:33.419
I don't like to use the word price at this
point, because we haven't talked very much about
1:48:33.419,1:48:35.969
money. But when you get
further down the line
1:48:35.969,1:48:40.610
you see it's really about prices realized
in the market, and exchange-value is the price
1:48:40.610,1:48:43.769
of a commodity.
1:48:43.769,1:48:46.609
Okay, we should leave it there.
So thanks very much.
1:48:46.609,1:48:52.909
We don't meet next week, right?,
because…What is it?
1:48:52.909,1:48:55.679
» STUDENT: Labor Day.
» DAVID HARVEY: Oh, Labor Day, what a good idea.
1:48:55.679,1:48:57.739
Next time I want you to read
1:48:57.739,1:49:03.840
the rest of chapter one, and chapter two.
1:49:03.840,1:49:08.169
So we will get to the end
of chapter two. Chapter two is pretty short.
1:49:08.169,1:49:12.650
The rest of this chapter is very
curious for a variety of reasons. I mentioned
1:49:12.650,1:49:17.599
Marx's literary style. His
literary style changes from
1:49:17.599,1:49:23.369
crisp analytic, like you've seen here,
and that goes on for the next one,
1:49:23.369,1:49:27.419
to what I can only call
his kind of 'accountancy style',
1:49:27.419,1:49:29.869
which is deadly boring.
1:49:29.869,1:49:31.629
Where: 'this is worth two shillings
1:49:31.629,1:49:34.650
and that's worth three shillings,
1:49:34.650,1:49:38.269
and that's worth two and a half pence.
And if we add this to that we will end up with…'
1:49:38.269,1:49:39.269
Deadly boring.
1:49:39.269,1:49:42.980
So the third section is rather long
1:49:42.980,1:49:46.550
and rather boring of that style.
1:49:46.550,1:49:49.510
And he could have done
it much quicker in my view.
1:49:49.510,1:49:52.860
But it has some very important
insights in it. And so you're going to
1:49:52.860,1:49:53.810
find yourself struggling.
1:49:53.810,1:49:57.070
The last section of chapter one is the
fetishism of commodities, where it's
1:49:57.070,1:50:00.300
about werewolves and Robinson Crusoe,
1:50:00.300,1:50:04.489
in an incredible kind of literary
style. So you suddenly find in this chapter
1:50:04.489,1:50:08.159
you're going to have a big
sample of Marx's different writing styles.
1:50:08.159,1:50:09.479
And they are all together.
1:50:09.479,1:50:13.699
Now, if you wrote a PhD that way, people
would say: For god's sakes!, smooth this out,
1:50:13.699,1:50:15.320
you can't do that.
1:50:15.320,1:50:18.380
Which style you're gonna write in?
But he writes in different styles.
1:50:18.380,1:50:19.559
And he enjoys it.
1:50:19.559,1:50:21.810
And it's fun, actually, because you starts to say:
1:50:21.810,1:50:25.049
How on earth does this relate to that?
1:50:25.049,1:50:28.939
And what does this really mean?
So anyway, chapter one is like that.
1:50:28.939,1:50:30.369
Chapter two is relatively short,
1:50:30.369,1:50:33.389
and again fairly analytic.
1:50:33.389,1:50:36.969
Key concepts are laid out a bit like here. So
it's a step further along the conceptional apparatus.
1:50:36.969,1:50:42.199
Okay? So chapters one and two
1:50:42.199,1:50:45.859
for next time.