McKenzie Wark on Mon, 12 Jun 2000 20:37:39 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> [talk given at tulipomania dotcom] |
Andrew Ross contributes a telling analysis of 'sacrifical labour'. Including these remarks: "All of the above leaves us, especially educators among us, with some difficult questions. Are we contributing involuntarily to the problem when we urge youth, in pursuing their career goals, to place principles of public interest or collective political agency or creative expression above the pursuit of material security? In a labor environment heavily under the sway of neo-liberal business models, is it fair to say that this service ideal invites, if it does not vindicate, the manipulation of inexpensive labor?" If that's what we're teaching, the answer has to be yes. But it strikes me the problem lies, in the humanities, with a teaching that stresses textual content over media form. Too much attention to what's on the page, not how it is made, or circulated. I had an amazing argument on the cultstud-l list once about the practice of giving photocopies of stuff out to students free. (Academics are the original Luther Blissetts in this regard). What it means is that by giving stuff away free, creators are denied income (along with publishers), which means the authors don't get paid, and can't leave their day jobs. The publishers raise the threshhold of what is a viable publication. The students get free stuff they don't have to pay for, but then graduate into a (non)market where they can't sell their textual worth because of the same practice. A classic viscous circle. Anyway, what i discovered was that this principle of free stuff was just sacroscanct. Amazing. Academics complaining about the lack of income from publishing, and lack of opportunity to publish and live off publishing, who then steal stuff from their colleagues and give it away free. So what you have is a world in which everyone is dependent on teaching for their income, or on day jobs. So you end up teaching people how to become slaves to the same system. Dependent on the universities for jobs, due to the lack of an alternative market for one's skills. A market that would actually exist if copyright was protected. This plays into the hands of the universities, who confront workers with nowher else to go, and who, to cap it all off, insist on training even more workers to compete for their jobs! (IN my brief career as a trade unionist, we kept a very close eye on the numbers in those apprenticeship programs!) Of course you can cue the protests about the monopoly corporations that control academic publishing, blah, blah. But of course, with so much copyright theft going on, it is only the very big firms who can survive. They can get so much product out so fast that they can keep ahead of the copying. And of course they skew the circulation process towards a high turnover approach, based on fashion. You gotta buy at least a few books or journals to be up with the latest cut. In short, theft of copyright benefits monopoly publishers and the universities, and it disadvantages other owners of copyright, be they individuals or small firms. How can one extract a revenue stream from intellectual labour? One that is based in intellectual property, but where that property is a relative, not an absolute right? So that one has private property, which secures liberty, but one also has an intellectual commons, that secures the common good and the common wealth. Its a classic question for pre and post marxist political economy. Its an issue that was widely discussed, in English law at least, in the 18th century. The century that gave us the artist and the writer as agents in the public realm precisely because it was when their right to property was secured. Artists and writers emerged from shackles of patronage, and met the owners of other kinds of property, not on an equal footing, but at least with a leg to stand on. But when one turns to humanities academics in the 20th century, you find them unable to conceive of their interests as a class interest, precisely because they cannon conceive of class in terms of property. They imagine themselves romatically linked to propertyless workers, when workers tend not to be such fools. The labour movement secured what rights it could for labour as a form of property in its own right, a property that could be alientated from its owner only under limited conditions -- at least in those parts of the world where social democracy prevailed. In the highly unionised Australian academic sector, the struggle goes on as if we were manual labourers, struggling over work load models and such. But the question of intellectual property remains relatively unaddressed. The photocopiers churn overtime at the start of each semester, giving away one form of property, and leaving us with nothing to argue about with our bosses but the other, more manual kind. Just the other day i received a contract for me to sign from the Athlone Press, asking me to sign away all rights to some writing, in all territories, in perpetuity -- in exchange for what? The mere privilege of being published! So dulled has the scholarly mind become to the real mechanisms of the cultural and knowledge economy, that it will happily sign these slave's contracts without a second thought. NO wonder the universities and the conglomerate publishers love cultural studies. By focussing on the text, not the vector, on identity, not property -- it makes perfect 'content' for others to profit by. But fortunately there will always be some, like Andrew Ross, who ask the right questions -- even if i doubt Andrew and i would agree on the answers. yours in insomnia, __________________________________________ "We no longer have roots, we have aerials." http://www.mcs.mq.edu.au/~mwark -- McKenzie Wark _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold