1
0
mirror of https://github.com/opsxcq/mirror-textfiles.com.git synced 2025-09-09 12:30:43 +02:00
Files
mirror-textfiles.com/politics/SPUNK/sp000545.txt

252 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext

The Commodity as Spectacle
The commodity can only be understood in its undistorted essence when it
becomes the universal category of society as a whole. Only in this context
does the reification produced by commodity relations assume decisive
importance both for the objective evolution of society and for the stance
adopted by men towards it. Only then does the commodity become crucial for
the subjugation of men's consciousness to the forms in which this
reification finds expression.... As labor is progressively rationalized
and mechanized man's lack of will is reinforced by the way in which his
activity becomes less and less active and more and more contemplative.
Lukacs, History and Class Consciousness
35
The self-movement of the spectacle consists in this: it arrogates to itself
everything that in human activity exists in a fluid state so as to possess it
in a congealed form -- as things that, being the negative expression of
living value, have become exclusively abstract value. In these signs we
recognize our old enemy the commodity, which appears at first sight a very
trivial thing, and easily understood, yet which is in reality a very queer
thing, abounding in metaphysical subtleties.
36
Here we have the principle of commodity fetishism, the domination of society
by things whose qualities are "at the same time perceptible and imperceptible
by the senses." This principle is absolutely fulfilled in the spectacle,
where the perceptible world is replaced by a set of images that are superior
to that world yet at the same time impose themselves as eminently
perceptible.
37
The world the spectacle holds up to view is at once here and elsewhere; it is
the world of the commodity ruling over all lived experience. The commodity
world is thus shown as it really is, for its logic is one with men's
estrangement from one another and from the sum total of what they produce.
38
The loss of quality so obvious at every level of the language of the
spectacle, from the objects it lauds to the behavior it regulates, merely
echoes the basic traits of a real production process that shuns reality. The
commodity form is characterized exclusively by self-equivalence -- it is
exclusively quantitative in nature: the quantitative is what it develops, and
it can only develop within the quantitative .
39
Despite the fact that it excludes quality, this development is still subject,
qua development, to the qualitative. Thus the spectacle betrays the fact that
it must eventually break the bounds of its own abundance. Though this is not
true locally, except here and there, it is already true at the universal
level which was the commodity's original standard -- a standard that it has
been able to live up to by turning the whole planet into a single world
market.
40
The development of the forces of production is the real unconscious history
that has built and modified the conditions of existence of human groups
(understood as the conditions of survival and their extension): this
development has been the basis of all human enterprise. The realm of
commodities has meant the constitution, within a natural economy, of a
surplus survival. The production of commodities, which implies the exchange
of a variety of products among independent producers, was long able to retain
an artisanal aspect embodied in a marginal economic activity where its
quantitative essence was masked. Wherever it encountered the social
conditions of large-scale trade and capital accumulation, however, such
production successfully established total hegemony over the economy. The
entire economy then became what the commodity, throughout this campaign of
conquest, had shown itself to be -- namely, a process of quantitative
development. The unceasing deployment of economic power in the shape of
commodities has transfigured human labor into labor-as-commodity, into
wage-labor, and eventually given rise to an abundance thanks to which the
basic problem of survival, though solved, is solved in such a way that it is
not disposed of, but is rather forever cropping up again at a higher level.
Economic growth liberates societies from the natural pressures occasioned by
their struggle for survival, but they still must be liberated from their
liberators. The independence of the commodity has spread to the entire
economy over which the commodity now reigns. The economy transforms the
world, but it transforms it into a world of the economy. The pseudo-nature in
which labor has become alienated demands that such labor remain in its
service indefinitely, and inasmuch as this estranged activity is answerable
only to itself it is able in turn to enroll all socially permissible efforts
and projects under its banner. In these circumstances an abundance of
commodities, which is to say an abundance of commodity relations, can be no
more than an augmented survival.
41
The commodity's dominion over the economy was at first exercised in a covert
manner. The economy itself, the material basis of social life, was neither
perceived nor understood -- not properly known precisely because of its
"familiarity." In a society where concrete commodities were few and far
between, it was the dominance of money that seemed to play the role of
emissary, invested with full authority by an unknown power. With the coming
of the industrial revolution, the division of labor specific to that
revolution's manufacturing system, and mass production for a world market,
the commodity emerged in its full-fledged form as a force aspiring to the
complete colonization of social life. It was at this moment too that
political economy established itself as at once the dominant science and the
science of domination.
42
The spectacle corresponds to the historical moment at which the commodity
completes its colonization of social life. It is not just that the
relationship to commodities is now plain to see -- commodities are now all
that there is to see; the world we see is the world of the commodity. The
growth of the dictatorship of modern economic production is both extensive
and intensive in character. In the least industrialized regions its presence
is already felt in the form of imperialist domination by those areas that
lead the world in productivity. In these advanced sectors themselves, social
space is continually being blanketed by stratum after stratum of commodities.
With the advent of the so-called second industrial revolution, alienated
consumption is added to alienated production as an inescapable duty of the
masses. The entirety of labor sold is transformed overall into the total
commodity. A cycle is thus set in train that must be maintained at all costs:
the total commodity must be returned in fragmentary form to a fragmentary
individual completely cut off from the concerted action of the forces of
production. To this end the already specialized science of domination is
further broken down into specialties such as sociology, applied psychology,
cybernetics, semiology and so on, which oversee the self-regulation of every
phase of the process.
43
Whereas at the primitive stage of capitalist accumulation "political economy
treats the proletarian as a mere worker" who must receive only the minimum
necessary to guarantee his labor-power, and never considers him "in his
leisure, in his humanity," these ideas of the ruling class are revised just
as soon as so great an abundance of commodities begins to be produced that a
surplus "collaboration" is required of the workers. All of a sudden the
workers in question discover that they are no longer invariably subject to
the total contempt so clearly built into every aspect of the organization and
management of production; instead they find that every day, once work is
over, they are treated like grown-ups, with a great show of solicitude and
politeness, in their new role as consumers. The humanity of the commodity
finally attends to the workers' "leisure and humanity" for the simple reason
that political economy as such now can -- and must -- bring these spheres
under its sway. Thus it is that the totality of human existence falls under
the regime of the "perfected denial of man."
44
The spectacle is a permanent opium war waged to make it impossible to
distinguish goods from commodities, or true satisfaction from a survival that
increases according to its own logic. Consumable survival must increase, in
fact, because it continues to enshrine deprivation. The reason there is
nothing beyond augmented survival, and no end to its growth, is that survival
itself belongs to the realm of dispossession: it may gild poverty, but it
cannot transcend it.
45
Automation, which is at once the most advanced sector of modern industry and
the epitome of its practice, confronts the world of the commodity with a
contradiction that it must somehow resolve: the same technical infrastructure
that is capable of abolishing labor must at the same time preserve labor as a
commodity -- and indeed as the sole generator of commodities. If automation,
or for that matter any mechanisms, even less radical ones, that can increase
productivity, are to be prevented from reducing socially necessary labor-time
to an unacceptably low level, new forms of employment have to be created. A
happy solution presents itself in the growth of the tertiary or service
sector in response to the immense strain on the supply lines of the army
responsible for distributing and hyping the commodities of the moment. The
coincidence is neat: on the one hand, the system is faced with the necessity
of reintegrating newly redundant labor; on the other, the very factitiousness
of the needs associated with the commodities on offer calls out a whole
battery of reserve forces.
46
Exchange value could only have arisen as the proxy of use value, but the
victory it eventually won with its own weapons created the preconditions for
its establishment as an autonomous power. By activating all human use value
and monopolizing that value's fulfillment, exchange value eventually gained
the upper hand. The process of exchange became indistinguishable from any
conceivable utility, thereby placing use value at its mercy. Starting out as
the condottiere of use value, exchange value ended up waging a war that was
entirely its own.
47
The falling rate of use value, which is a constant of the capitalist economy,
gives rise to a new form of privation within the realm of augmented survival;
this is not to say that this realm is emancipated from the old poverty: on
the contrary, it requires the vast majority to take part as wage workers in
the unending pursuit of its ends -- a requirement to which, as everyone
knows, one must either submit or die. It is the reality of this situation --
the fact that, even in its most impoverished form (food, shelter), use value
has no existence outside the illusory riches of augmented survival -- that is
the real basis for the general acceptance of illusion in the consumption of
modern commodities. The real consumer thus becomes a consumer of illusion.
The commodity is this illusion, which is in fact real, and the spectacle is
its most general form.
48
Use value was formerly implicit in exchange value. In terms of the
spectacle's topsy-turvy logic, however, it has to be explicit -- for the very
reason that its own effective existence has been eroded by the
overdevelopment of the commodity economy, and that a counterfeit life calls
for a pseudojustification.
49
The spectacle is another facet of money, which is the abstract general
equivalent of all commodities. But whereas money in its familiar form has
dominated society as the representation of universal equivalence, that is, of
the exchangeability of diverse goods whose uses are not otherwise compatible,
the spectacle in its full development is money's modern aspect; in the
spectacle the totality of the commodity world is visible in one piece, as the
general equivalent of whatever society as a whole can be and do. The
spectacle is money for contemplation only, for here the totality of use has
already been bartered for the totality of abstract representation. The
spectacle is not just the servant of pseudo-use -- it is already, in itself,
the pseudo-use of life.
50
With the achievement of a purely economic abundance, the concentrated result
of social labor becomes visible, subjecting all reality to an appearance that
is in effect that labor's product. Capital is no longer the invisible center
determining the mode of production. As it accumulates, capital spreads out to
the periphery, where it assumes the form of tangible objects. Society in its
length and breadth becomes capital's faithful portrait.
51
The economy's triumph as an independent power inevitably also spells its
doom, for it has unleashed forces that must eventually destroy the economic
necessity that was the unchanging basis of earlier societies. Replacing that
necessity by the necessity of boundless economic development can only mean
replacing the satisfaction of primary human needs, now met in the most
summary manner, by a ceaseless manufacture of pseudo-needs, all of which come
down in the end to just one -- namely, the pseudo-need for the reign of an
autonomous economy to continue. Such an economy irrevocably breaks all ties
with authentic needs to the precise degree that it emerges from a social
unconscious that was dependent on it without knowing it. "Whatever is
conscious wears out. Whatever is unconscious remains unalterable. Once freed,
however, surely this too must fall into ruins?" (Freud).
52
By the time society discovers that it is contingent on the economy, the
economy has in point of fact become contingent on society. Having grown as a
subterranean force until it could emerge sovereign, the economy proceeds to
lose its power. Where economic id was, there ego shall be. The subject can
only arise out of society -- that is, out of the struggle that society
embodies. The possibility of a subject's existing depends on the outcome of
the class struggle which turns out to be the product and the producer of
history's economic foundation.
53
Consciousness of desire and the desire for consciousness together and
indissolubly constitute that project which in its negative form has as its
goal the abolition of classes and the direct possession by the workers of
every aspect of their activity. The opposite of this project is the society
of the spectacle, where the commodity contemplates itself in a world of its
own making.
From the Society of the Spectacle, by Guy Debord