Commodity Fetishism and Transactional Orders
3/21/01
I. Use Value and Exchange Value in Colombia
A. Devil represents: "creative response to an enormously deep-seated conflict between use-value and exchange-value orientations" (21)
B. Marx's discussion of use value and exchange value1. Use value: an item's value comes from its function, how people use itC. Taussig: peasants in Colombia see what Marx was arguing
2. Exchange value: "the proportion, in which use-values of one kind exchange for use-values of another kind"
3. Capitalism: expansion of use values
4. Alienation of labor: Value comes not from labor or use, but from item itself1. Peasant production: mutual exchanges allow purchase of use values, people, things, labor, and land are linked
2. Capitalist plantation agriculture: peasants see the use values they produce being alienated and commoditized as property of plantation owners
3. The clear vision of marginality: Because Colombian peasants are still partly peasant, they can see the conflict between use and exchange values
4. The devil symbolizes new economy but exists because the old still does
5. Once peasants are fully proletarian, devil will lose its meaningII. Commodity Fetishism and Breeding Money
A. Devil represents fetishism which occurs in capitalism
B. Beliefs in baptizing money1. Money is baptized instead of childC. Marx's formulas for capital
2. Money returns to owner, with interest1. Use value: C - M - C (Commodity A - Money - Commodity B)D. Capitalism is supernatural, baptism of money critiques this
2. Capitalism: M - C - M' (Money - Commodity - More Money)1. People initiate fetishism because of greed and selfishness
2. Child is harmed: denied salvationIII. Tio in the Tin Mines
A. Mining in Bolivian history1. Pre-conquest Incan stateB. Tio = "uncle," devil figure in the minesa. Hierarchical polity2. Four centuries of Spanish colonization
b. Tribute
c. Small-scale gold and silver mining
d. Undemanding compulsory labor requirementa. Mining expands3. 19th century Bolivian independence: Tin barons = wealthy mine owners
b. Forced labor
c. Community life suffers because of absent males
4. 1952 - state nationalizes mines
5. 1964 - military takeover, rites to the devil were suppressed1. Origins in pre-conquest Andean peasant beliefs in spirit owners of land and mountainsC. Taussig's interpretation of Tio
2. Hahuari owned the mountains above contemporary mines
3. Impact of Spanish conquesta. Campaigns against idolatry2. Tio owns the mines
b. Good-evil dualism
c. Ambiguous native spirits become good saints and evil devil figures
d. Devil figures associated with conquerorsa. Miners worship Tio to reduce accidents and extract wealth
b. Tio is gluttonous, takes lives1. Money and commodity production have dissolved traditional moralities
2. Miners extract mineral wealth for mine owners but are paid a pittance
3. People value things and profit more than people
4. Profound sense of dislocation
5. Exchange value has destroyed use value, reciprocity, redistributionIV. Evaluating Taussig
A. Contributions1. Devil symbolizes dislocation, helplessnessB. Problems
2. Capitalism doesn't happen overnight and isn't total
3. Spiritual beliefs present consciousness of changing conditions and also help to create consciousness, spur to political action (see conclusion)
4. People on margins have privileged perspective1. Too stark a contrast between peasant and capitalist: Was there ever an idyllic system of use values>
2. Tribute system wasn't about use value, but about exchange. Is the transition really about the problems of exchange value more generally?V. Transactional Orders
A. Use value and exchange value exist in most societies before capitalism
B. Transactional orders1. Short-term cycles governed by cash, individual gainC. Gender dimensions to transactional orders
2. Long-term cycles focused on reproduction, household, food
3. Money and commodities exist in both, difference is uses to which they are put1. Men: money is individualistic, used for gambling or drinkingD. Money can tear people apart AND bind them together
2. Women: money is used for household expenses, children
E. Responses to capitalism depend on pre-existing transactional orders and their logics
F. Taussig oversimplifies history as movement from use value to exchange value
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For more information, contact: aleshkow@holycross.edu