The Labour Debate: An Investigation into the Theory and Reality of Capitalist Work - Ana C. Dinerstein & Michael Neary

The Labour Debate

Out of print 2002 collection in the Open Marxist tradition. Co-editor Mike Neary gives a more recent introduction below.
The book featuring contributions by John Holloway, Simon Clarke, Werner Bonefeld, Harry Cleaver, Ana C. Dinerstein, Massimo De Angelis, Michael Neary, Glenn Rikowski, Graham Taylor.

Submitted by UseValueNotExc… on October 20, 2023

Contents:

From Here to Utopia: Finding Inspiration for the Labour Debate
Ana C. Dinerstein and Michael Neary

1 What Labour Debate?
1.1 Class and Classification: Against, In and Beyond Labour
John Holloway

1.2 Class Struggle and the Working Class: The Problem of Commodity
Fetishism

Simon Clarke

1.3 The Narrowing of Marxism: A Comment on Simon Clarke’s Comments
John Holloway

2 Capital, Labour and Primitive Accumulation: On Class and Constitution
Werner Bonefeld

3 Labour and Subjectivity: Rethinking the Limits of Working Class
Consciousness
Graham Taylor

4 Hayek, Bentham and the Global Work Machine: The Emergence of the
Fractal-Panopticon
Massimo De Angelis

5 Work is Still the Central Issue! New Words for New Worlds
Harry Cleaver

6 Labour Moves: A Critique of the Concept of Social Movement Unionism
Michael Neary

7 Fuel for the Living Fire: Labour-Power!
Glenn Rikowski

8 Regaining Materiality: Unemployment and the Invisible Subjectivity of
Labour
Ana C. Dinerstein

9 Anti-Value-in-Motion: Labour, Real Subsumption and the Struggles against
Capitalism
Ana C. Dinerstein and Michael Neary

Writing in 2014, co-editor Mike Neary discussed the book:

I want to revisit work I did with Ana Dinerstein in 2002: The Labour Debate: an investigation into the theory and reality of capitalist work. The theme of the book was that labour has ceased to be a critical concept for social theory, becoming ‘an intellectually pretentious way of saying work’ ( Nichols 1992 10). The concept of labour has been replaced by various forms of identity and postmodern subjectivities, shamed by its apparent aversion to gender and disadvantaged minorities, refocused as problems of equality, and abandoned in the search of more democratic versions of civil society (p.25).

The purpose of the book was to recover the notion of labour within a framework of critical political economy. This meant dealing with labour not as labour: reified as a thing in itself, but labour as a form of value. For Marx, value, or abstract labour, is the substance of Capital. This requires framing the issue of the significance of labour around Marx’s labour theory of value, or value theory of labour (Elson 1979), as the fundamental way of understanding and transforming capitalist social relations.

Chapters in the book were written by John Holloway, Simon Clarke, Harry Cleaver, Glen Rikowski, Werner Bonefeld, Graham Taylor, Massimo de Angelis and myself and Ana Dinerstein. Each author contributed to this debate through their own subversive Marxist traditions: Open Marxism, Autonomous Marxism, and other critical reinterpretations of Marx’s mature social theory, by dealing with concept of labour, real abstraction and the revolution of everyday life.

Ana and I developed a notion of ‘anti-value in motion’ from the way in which Marx described the dynamic movement of abstract labour, or the way in which Capital moves, as ‘value in motion’ ( Marx Capital Vol 2). Anti-value in motion is contra Capital’s determinate abstractions: real forms of value expressed most violently as Money and the State, unleashed against civilian populations. Anti-value in motion means constructing new forms of post-capitalist sociability where human life and nature are the project rather than the resource, or Utopia as a theory of abundance: the ability to satisfy needs through capacities which are already in existence ( Kay and Mott 1982) aka communism (Dean 2012).

The Labour Debate is part of a renewed interest in the concept of labour as the crisis of Capital intensifies. Significant contributions include work by John Holloway, e.g. Change the World Without Taking Power: The Meaning of Revolution Today, written in 2003, and Crack Capitalism published in 2010, as well as writing engaged with Moishe Postone’s Time, Labour and Social Domination: A Reinterpretaton of Marx’s Critical Theory, published in 1993. Hardt and Negri’s refusal of the law of value in Labour of Dionysus ( 1994) and Empire (2000) have provoked a multitude of commentaries on the significance of labour as the subject of revolution. Other important recent work includes Kathi Weeks(2011) The Problem with Work: Feminism, Marxism, Antiwork Politics and Postwork Imaginaries. The significance of Weeks’ writing is that she deals with the negative consequences that are inherent in the nature of capitalist work, rather than focus on particular types of crisis-work: unemployment, immaterial labour or precarity. She offers alternative possibilities to capitalist work: reductions in work-time and a social wage. These alternatives are not offered as the solution to the catastrophe of capitalist work, but a movement towards a real alternative, not in the future, but now, in the present.

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