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Articles by Sandwichman

Three Fragments Rebooted: The Unfettering

October 6, 2024

Around three years ago I made a pop-up book titled Three Fragments on Machines, that contained a collection of quotes from the Grundrisse that illustrated some of the research I had been doing related to disposable time in Marx’s theory. Last spring, I started work on another pop-up book showing the connection between the Grundrisse and Marx’s more famous reference to forces of production, relations of production, and fetters from his Preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy. I abandoned that project when the designs started to get too complicated.Now I am coming back to that second project but with a less ambitions design and more sparing textual approach — what I consider now as a "second edition" of Three Fragments. Central to this new edition is a mash-up of

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Basil Oberholzer’s Last Hour

September 8, 2024

Nassau SeniorIn Chapter 9 of Capital, "The Rate of Surplus Value," Marx included a satirical section 3, ridiculing Nassau Senior’s dimwitted, unmistakably partisan argument that reducing the hours of work from 12 hours a day to 10 would destroy a factory’s net profit. Another half hour of reduction would eliminate even the gross profit. Marx simply pointed out that the basis of profit, surplus value, was extracted from the labour process throughout the day and not entirely in the final hour of work.One hundred and eighty-seven years after the learned professor Senior "was summoned from Oxford to Manchester, to learn in the latter place the political economy he taught in the former" the journal Ecological Economics published an article by Basil Oberholzer titled, "Post-growth transition,

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading 

July 30, 2024

The second part of my book proposal is a chapter outline and summary. I will be doing that on the installment plan, one chapter at a time. Below is a table of contents:

2.0 Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading – part 2.0 – Angry Bear

2.1 Ambivalence – Angry Bear

2.2 Der Gefesselte Marx – Angry Bear

2.3 Inversion – Angry Bear

2.4 Alienated labour and disposable time – Angry Bear

2.5 Pauperism and “minus-labour” – Angry Bear

2.6 From sufficiency to planned obsolescence … and back? – Angry Bear

2.7 The Revolutionary Class – Angry Bear

2.8 A nation is really rich if the working day is 6 hours rather than twelve – Angry Bear

2.9 The return of disposable time: time filled with the presence of the now –

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Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.0

July 29, 2024

Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.0

The second part of my book proposal is a chapter outline and summary. I will be doing that on the installment plan, one chapter at a time. Below is a table of contents:

Fetters/Der Gefesselte Marx

Ambivalence

Inversion

Alienated labour and disposable time

Pauperism and “minus-labour”

From sufficiency to planned obsolescence… and back?

The revolutionary class

A nation is really rich if the working day is 6 hours rather than twelve.

The return of disposable time: time filled with the presence of the now

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Ambivalence

July 23, 2024

By Tom Walker

Econospeak

Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.2

Published in 1821, The Source and Remedy of the National Difficulties was a major influence on Marx’s analysis of ‘disposable time.’ In an 1851 notebook, Marx logged a 1000 word summary of the pamphlet. He also discussed it extensively in volume 3 of Theories of Surplus Value. His discussion of disposable time in a section of his Grundrisse notebooks that came to be known as the ‘fragment on machines’ has inspired rethinking of Marx’s mature work by authors ranging from Raniero Panzieri, Antonio Negri, and Paolo Virno to Moishe Postone. Yet those re-evaluations do not acknowledge the decisive contribution of The Source and Remedy.

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Inversion

July 23, 2024

By Tom Walker

Econospeak

Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.3

 Inversion

Marx stated repeatedly in the Grundrisse that capital inverts the relationship between necessary and superfluous labour time. Capital both creates disposable time and expropriates it in the form of surplus value, reversing the nature-imposed priority of necessity before superfluity and making the performance of necessary labour conditional on the production of surplus value. Marx’s analysis of this inversion bears unmistakable traces of Ludwig Feuerbach’s critique in The Essence of Christianity of the inversion of collective humanity and the divine, which had so influenced the young Marx. The theme of inversion returns

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Inversion

July 19, 2024

By Tom Walker

Econospeak

Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.3

 Inversion

Marx stated repeatedly in the Grundrisse that capital inverts the relationship between necessary and superfluous labour time. Capital both creates disposable time and expropriates it in the form of surplus value, reversing the nature-imposed priority of necessity before superfluity and making the performance of necessary labour conditional on the production of surplus value. Marx’s analysis of this inversion bears unmistakeable traces of Ludwig Feuerbach’s critique in The Essence of Christianity of the inversion of collective humanity and the divine, which had so influenced the young Marx. The theme of inversion returns

Read More »

Alienated labour and disposable time

July 17, 2024

By Tom Walker

Econospeak

Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.4

Marx’s remarkable, yet largely neglected statement that “[t]he whole development of wealth rests on the creation of disposable time” and his subsequent analysis of the relationship between disposable time, superfluous products, and surplus value suggests an alternative analysis of alienation that identifies disposable time itself as that which is appropriated and confronts the labourer as alien property. Marx came close to making such an analysis explicit in a footnote that begins, “It does not belong here, but can already be recalled here . . . ” and in which he noted “In relation to the whole of society, the creation of disposable

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How To Save Free Enterprise

July 14, 2024

Who doesn’t want to save free enterprise? In 1974 alone there were two books published with the title, How to Save Free Enterprise. One of them had the subtitle, "from BUREAUCRATS, AUTOCRATS, AND TECHNOCRATS." The other one, by Arthur O. Dahlberg, had no subtitle. Implicitly, then, "from ITSELF."1974 was the high water mark for How to Save Free Enterprise books. There were none published in any other year, although the idea of saving free enterprise had its heyday in the 1940s. The antagonist then was frequently the New Deal, although Henry Wallace targeted monopoly in his Saturday Evening Post essay, "We Must Save Free Enterprise."Dahlberg’s prescription for saving free enterprise had two main parts. The first part was a scheme to discourage people from hoarding cash or demand deposits.

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading. The Revolutionary Class

July 5, 2024

By Tom Walker

Econospeak

Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.7

The revolutionary class

“The working class is either revolutionary or it is nothing,” Marx wrote to German politician J.B. von Schweitzer and copied “word for word” in a letter to Engels. In The Manifesto of the Communist Party, Marx and Engels wrote “the proletariat alone is a really revolutionary class.” Marx cited that statement in a footnote at the very end of the penultimate chapter of volume 1 of Capital. Without denying the plausibility of other, canonical, interpretation of the revolutionary working class, there is one clear definition given by Marx in the Grundrisse that has escaped notice as a definition of the

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Self-Limitation as a Social Project

July 5, 2024

The following passage is from a 1993 New Left Review essay, "Political Ecology: Expertocracy versus Self-Limitation," by André Gorz. It is an argument for regenerating a norm of sufficiency as a political project. How much is enough and how can we build a popular consensus and movement around such a determination? Of particular interest to me, in the final paragraph Gorz mentions the "anonymous Ricardoite" along with John Maynard Keynes and Wassily Leontieff as examples of those who have seen disposable time as "the true measure of wealth." That Ricardoite was, of course, Charles Wentworth Dilke who wrote the 1821 pamphlet, The Source and Remedy of the National Difficulites.Self-Limitation as a Social ProjectIn complex industrial societies, it is impossible to obtain
an eco-compatible

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A nation is really rich if the working day is 6 hours rather than twelve

July 1, 2024

Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.8

by Tom Walker

Econospeak

In “The Trinity Formula,” in chapter 48 of volume 3 of Capital, Marx returned to the contradiction between the forces and relations of production. This time, however, it was not to deplore or analyze the fetters but to examine the realm of freedom that would become possible when “socialized man, the associated producers, govern the human metabolism with nature in a rational way, bringing it under their collective control instead of being dominated by it as a blind power.” This governance of the metabolism with nature would constitute the realm of necessity upon which the true realm of freedom can flourish. “The reduction of the

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The return of disposable time: time filled with the presence of the now

June 28, 2024

Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.9

by Tom Walker

Econospeak

Framing the revolution as being about disposable time brings Marx closer to Walter Benjamin’s remark about revolution being “the act by which the human race traveling in the train applies the emergency brake.” Benjamin’s “On the concept of history” was composed in the wake of Benjamin’s despair at the Hitler-Stalin pact that sealed his disillusionment with the Soviet Union along with the interpretation of historical materialism as a story of progress. “Why should we be the very generation with the luck to experience redemption?” Benjamin asked his friend Soma Morgenstern in 1939. 

One of Benjamin’s draft theses that didn’t make it

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Advocating the revaluation of values so socially available free time would become the measure of value

June 27, 2024

Tom Walker or Sandwichman (many of us know him as) has a series of articles I am going to post to Angry Bear. Tom spends much of his time discussing Labor and its value to capital or what I would call manufacturing. Without Labor input there would be no value.

Leisure to Attend to Our Spiritual Business (updated to include link to published article)

by Tom Walker (Sandwichman)

ABSTRACT (PDF AVAILABLE HERE)

Time is central to Martin Hägglund’s discussion of secular faith and spiritual freedom. Time is precisely what is finite in this life and presides over the relationships we value and our risk of losing them. Hägglund adopted the notion of disposable time from Karl Marx’s Grundrisse and reframed it as the more

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.9

June 20, 2024

The return of disposable time: time filled with the presence of the nowFraming the revolution as being about disposable time brings Marx closer to Walter Benjamin’s remark about revolution being “the act by which the human race traveling in the train applies the emergency brake.” Benjamin’s “On the concept of history” was composed in the wake of Benjamin’s despair at the Hitler-Stalin pact that sealed his disillusionment with the Soviet Union along with the interpretation of historical materialism as a story of progress. “Why should we be the very generation with the luck to experience redemption?” Benjamin asked his friend Soma Morgenstern in 1939. One of Benjamin’s draft theses that didn’t make it to his final draft, the notion of revolution as an emergency brake to stop the runaway

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.8

June 19, 2024

A nation is really rich if the working
day is 6 hours rather than twelve.

In “The Trinity Formula,” in chapter 48 of volume 3 of Capital,
Marx returned to the contradiction between the forces and relations of
production. This time, however, it was not to deplore or analyze the fetters
but to examine the realm of freedom that would become possible when “socialized
man, the associated producers, govern the human metabolism with nature in a
rational way, bringing it under their collective control instead of being dominated
by it as a blind power.” This governance of the metabolism with nature would
constitute the realm of necessity upon which the true realm of freedom can
flourish. “The reduction of the working day is the basic prerequisite.”

Marx’s “prerequisite” echoes his draft of the

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.7

June 18, 2024

The revolutionary class

“The working class is either revolutionary or it is
nothing,” Marx wrote to German politician J.B. von Schweitzer and copied “word
for word” in a letter to Engels. In The Manifesto of the Communist Party,
Marx and Engels wrote “the proletariat alone is a really revolutionary class.”
Marx cited that statement in a footnote at the very end of the penultimate
chapter of volume 1 of Capital. Without denying the plausibility of
other, canonical, interpretation of the revolutionary working class, there is
one clear definition given by Marx in the Grundrisse that has escaped
notice as a definition of the revolutionary working class:

The more this contradiction develops, the more does it become
evident that the growth of the forces of production can no longer be bound

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.6

June 17, 2024

From sufficiency to planned obsolescence… and
back?

In the Grundrisse, Karl Marx argued that capital’s response
to the barrier to increasing production posed by satiated consumption took
three paths: promoting greater consumption of existing products, expanding
markets for existing products to new territories, and creating new needs
through the “discovery and creation of new use values.” In the twentieth
century, with the help of advertising and marketing, capital has added a fourth
method: create new needs through the premature destruction of old use values by
planned obsolescence. These methods allow capital to “ideally get beyond” the
barrier to production posed by consumption but can’t really overcome the
fundamental contradiction that “real wealth has to take on a specific form

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.5

June 14, 2024

Pauperism and “minus-labour”

“It is already contained in the concept of the free
labourer, that he is a pauper…“

Pauperism and surplus population play brief but strategic roles
in the Grundrisse, appearing in the three fragments on pages 397-423,
604-610, and 704-711, respectively, that all deal with the inverted
relationship between necessary labour and the superfluous – the first and third
fragments also revolving around disposable time. These two themes – or two moments
of the same theme – return with a vengeance in the climactic chapter 25 of Capital,
volume 1, “The General Law of Capitalist Accumulation.”

Closely related to pauperism, at least analytically, is
unproductive labour, which Marx gives fleeting attention to in the Grundrisse
and relegates to the unpublished “Chapter

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.4

June 13, 2024

Alienated labour and disposable timeMarx’s remarkable, yet largely neglected statement that “[t]he whole development of wealth rests on the creation of disposable time” and his subsequent analysis of the relationship between disposable time, superfluous products, and surplus value suggests an alternative analysis of alienation that identifies disposable time itself as that which is appropriated and confronts the labourer as alien property. Marx came close to making such an analysis explicit in a footnote that begins, “It does not belong here, but can already be recalled here…” and in which he noted “In relation to the whole of society, the creation of disposable time is then also creation of time for the production of science, art etc.,” anticipating his advocacy in notebook VII of, “the

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.3

June 12, 2024

Inversion

Marx stated repeatedly in the Grundrisse that capital
inverts the relationship between necessary and superfluous labour time. Capital
both creates disposable time and expropriates it in the form of surplus value,
reversing the nature-imposed priority of necessity before superfluity and
making the performance of necessary labour conditional on the production of
surplus value. Marx’s analysis of this inversion bears unmistakeable traces of
Ludwig Feuerbach’s critique in The Essence of Christianity of the
inversion of collective humanity and the divine, which had so influenced the young
Marx. The theme of inversion returns in the first chapter of Capital in the
section on the fetishism of the commodity, where in the first sentence Marx comments
on the commodity’s abundant

Read More »

Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.2

June 11, 2024

Ambivalence

Published in 1821, The Source and Remedy of the National
Difficulties was a major influence on Marx’s analysis of ‘disposable time.’ In
an 1851 notebook, Marx logged a 1000 word summary of the pamphlet. He also
discussed it extensively in volume 3 of Theories of Surplus Value. His
discussion of disposable time in a section of his Grundrisse notebooks that
came to be known as the ‘fragment on machines’ has inspired rethinking of
Marx’s mature work by authors ranging from Raniero Panzieri, Antonio Negri, and
Paolo Virno to Moishe Postone. Yet those re-evaluations do not acknowledge the decisive
contribution of The Source and Remedy. This chapter examines Marx’s admiration,
criticisms, and uses of the pamphlet, and the neglect of the pamphlet by
subsequent writers, and offers

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.1

June 10, 2024

Der Gefesselte Marx

Karl Marx’s preface to A
Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy contains the best-known
description of his theory of history. At some point contradiction between the
relations of production and the forces of production become fetters on the latter,
ushering in a period of social revolution. The traditional interpretation is
that the social revolution will unleash technological advances that enable
industrial production to expand by “leaps and bounds,” even as free time for
workers also increases. Marx’s description, however, specifically referred to a
general conclusion he had reached in the 1840s that “became the guiding
principle of my studies.” He did not suggest it was a précis of those
subsequent studies. In the Grundrisse, Marx had developed a much

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading — part 2.0

June 7, 2024

The second part of my book proposal is a chapter outline and summary. I will be doing that on the installment plan, one chapter at a time. Below is a table of contents:Fetters/Der Gefesselte MarxAmbivalenceInversionAlienated labour and disposable timePauperism and “minus-labour”From sufficiency to planned obsolescence… and back?The revolutionary classA nation is really rich if the working day is 6 hours rather than twelve.The return of disposable time: time filled with the presence of the now

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Book proposal: Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial reading part one.

June 1, 2024

Marx’s Fetters and the Realm of Freedom: a remedial readingTom WalkerOverview (chapter summaries will be presented in a future post)This book proposes a remedial reading of the relationship in Marx’s critique of political economy between the forces and relations of production, real wealth, and value. It is remedial in two senses. First, it seeks to remedy the long-standing misconception of the 1859 preface to A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy as Marx’s definitive statement on the contradiction between the forces and relations of production. Second, it does so by acknowledging the influence of the 1821 pamphlet, The Source and Remedy of the National Difficulties on Marx’s conception of disposable time as real wealth.In his celebrated 1859 preface, Karl Marx stated the

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Opium of the People and Radical Chains

May 12, 2024

The historical dust has not settled, but at this moment it seems clear that a proletariat which does not embrace Marxism is entirely possible. Why not, then, Marxism without a proletariat? In a thoughtful article, "Radical Chains: The Marxian Concept of Proletarian Mission" (Studies on the Left, September-October, 1966), Oscar Berland argues that this is not only a thinkable but also a necessary thought. Ronald Aronson’s "Reply" to Berland agrees that the proletariat has lost its revolutionary potential, but forcefully asserts that to scuttle the concept of proletarian mission is to scuttle Marx himself. The present paper in general sustains Berland, but puts the argument in sharper terms. At the same time, and this is its major purpose, this paper attempts to show that Marx’s mature

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The University at War and the Iceberg Strategy

May 2, 2024

While looking for old sources discussing the "manpower channeling" policies of the U.S. Selective Service (draft) during the Vietnam war, I uncovered a treasure trove of 1960s essays on the military-industrial-academic complex. The first one that caught my eye was "The University and the Political Economy" by James O’Connor. O’Connor later wrote The Fiscal Crisis of the State and founded the journal, Capitalism Nature Socialism. "The University and the Political Economy" appeared in the 1969 first issue of Leviathan, which was a successor to Viet-Report, enlisting many of the latter journal’s key personnel.I had some difficulty finding a digitized copy online of the Leviathan issue but then it turned up on the old standby, JSTOR, which has a nice collection of alternative press

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SEIZE THE MEANS OF INSTRUCTION!

April 29, 2024

Fifty-four years ago Les Temps Modernes published an essay by André Gorz titled, "Destroy the University." I am posting it here adding occasional underlining for emphasis and commentary at the end. As I will explain in my comments, this piece is of interest to me because of its relevance to current student demonstrations but also because of Gorz’s pioneering thought on ecological politics and on the future of work.Destroy the University, by André Gorz1. The university cannot function, and we must thus prevent it from functioning so that this impossibility is made manifest. No reform of any kind can render this institution viable. We must thus combat reforms, in their effects and in their conception, not because they are dangerous, but because they are illusory. The crisis of the

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