Thursday, April 12, 2007

From where I’m standing


Keir’s great blog about be(ar)s, rupture and the ‘Thou shalt not kill’ song has really got me thinking... about what's radical, what’s revolutionary and what is not, about rupture and even about ‘directional demands’. And about context or perspective. And about all that non-linear stuff about small actions potentially have very large effects.

I’ve been reading Massimo De Angelis’s new book, The Beginning of History. Massimo talks about value practices:
those actions and processes, as well as correspondent webs of relations, that are both predicated on a given value system and in turn (re)produce it. These are, in other words, social practices and correspondent relations that articulate individual bodies and the wholes of social bodies in particular ways. This articulation is produced by individual singularities discursively selecting what is ‘good’ and what is ‘bad’ within a value system and actually acting upon this selection. This action in turn goes through feedback mechanisms across the social body in such a way as to articulate social practices and constitute anew these ‘goods’ and ‘bads’ or, given the nature of feedback mechanisms, to set a limit to these ‘goods’ and ‘bads’. To talk about value practices is therefore to talk about how social form, organsiational reach, mode of doing, modes of co-producing and relating, forms of articulation of powers, are constituted through social processes.
I'm thinking that actions which appear to be within a capitalist logic, the value practices of the market, may in fact take us outside it, if only marginally. This tiny crevice, this little fissure or rupture, may then give us a foothold to step further outside, it may be a crack large enough to ease a crowbar into, it may spread and join with other such fissures, as John Holloway writes in his ‘Breaking Time’ piece.

So ‘Thou shalt not kill’ may be just another song for sale on the market, but the references to Crass and Minor Threat perhaps take us fleetingly outside market relations. And this is perhaps the potential of the ‘fair trade’: money, commodities, etc. are all produced/circulated, but participants are stepping outside the market logic which values only lowest cost of production as a ‘good’. But I think that how one views (or values) these, depends on one’s perspective. Compare the social centre in Venice which offers a three-course meal (doubt very much if it’s vegetarian), let alone vegan, for 10 euros (or a kebab, if you’re in a hurry) with the Common Place in Leeds, where such a menu would be considered a ‘bad’.

So, from where I’m standing it looks like Keir’s lying on the left side of the bed -- along with David Essex, Bryan Ferry, et al. -- but, no doubt, from where he’s lying, it all looks very different.

3 comments:

David said...

Not sure about the etiquette of commenting on your own blog, but here goes...

This stuff links to the idea of social systems as non-linear dynamical systems, as in complexity theory. (This idea is developed in Kay Summer and Harry Halpin's pieces 'The end of the world as we know it', in Shut Them Down!, and 'The Crazy Before the New', to be published in Turbulence.) Modes of production (value systems, in Massimo's language), including capitalism, are the attractors, possibly strange attractors, of these systems.

In 'normal' times, it's possible to act according to other value systems than that of capital, but it's hard not to get drawn back by the capital attractor. You have a workers' co-op, say, but your suppliers are worker-exploiting profit-maximisers, just as your competitors are... so you end up exploiting yourself. You have to: TINA -- there is no alternative. Similar with a bar or cafe in a social centre. Similar with 'fair trade' producers.

But, further from 'equilibrium', it may be easier to resist capital's attraction. If your 'customers' are also acting according to a non-capitalist value system, then you'll be under less pressure to minimise costs in order to 'compete' and hence survive. (And we're talking about social systems as survival strategies.) Perhaps this is what's happening with so-called 'solidarity economies'. Perhaps this is what's happening with the webs of fair-trade producers and buyers who are agreeing the prices of commodities such as coffee and cocoa apart from the international finance/commodity markets.

It's really easy to criticise fair trade, worker co-ops as 'reformist'. But perhaps we can understand such experiments as occupying that highly unstable region of ridges on the topographical map of all possible social systems. They could be drawn back to the capital attractor, but perhaps they are also within the basin of attraction of some other, more communistic mode of doing.

Keir said...

Seeing as I am a details man I feel I should point out that the song is actually called "Thou shalt ALWAYS kill" and that the post was tagged Beards not Bears, although I’ll grant you there is some hirsute cultural connection between the two.

I like the bit about social systems as survival systems though. I was taking the piss about Crass being outside commodification but the pay no more than bit makes sense as part of dole culture. The most important thing is whether it can take part in change beyond mere reproduction.

David said...

Yeah, OK, Keir, there's a few typos in there... beds, bards, bears, beards, beads... whatever.

I think Massimo's point, which echoes stuff we've written in the past, is that reproduction is never mere reproduction, it's never neutral. If you act according to the logic of some value system, then you also reproduce that value system.