Graeber - Value
Graeber - Value
Graeber - Value
|Postscript|
* * *
Yet at the same time, I am convinced that if it isn’t, this is very bad news for the
project of anthropology. In a very real sense, anthropology could be said to have
emerged around questions of value, and such questions have remained just below
the surface of just about every important theoretical debate.
When Johan Gottfried von Herder first proposed the concept of culture in the
eighteenth century, some of his principle targets were the state-of-nature fantasies
of political thinkers like Thomas Hobbes or Jean-Jacques Rousseau, popular in his
day, who assumed that primitive humans must have either lived in asocial isolation
or quickly came to a war of all-against-all over their pursuit of material advantage.
The problem with this whole assumption, he noted, was that it assumes that
humans were all pursuing the same sorts of thing: as two shepherds, he notes,
might quarrel over a stretch of pasturage. No doubt this might have happened now
and then—though it’s hard to imagine it would be much of a factor at a time when
humans were so thin on the ground and resources were relatively abundant.
Anyway, such quarrels would hardly explain either the origins of social order or of
the real basis of human enmity. Instead, what one actually observes is humans
rapidly clustering into different language groups, in which members had a spontan-
eous sense of familiar solidarity with one another but profound contempt for their
neighbors, precisely because (this is the subtext at least) they are not pursuing the
same forms of value as they ([1772] 2002: 147–54). Similarly, all nations of anti-
quity could be distinguished by which values they pursued: order and security
among the Egyptians, political freedom and artistic contests among the Greeks,
religious virtues among the Jews, legality, propriety, and magnificence among the
Romans, and so on ([1774] 2004). Cultures, when first conceived, were thus
imagined first and foremost as fields for the pursuit of certain forms of value—
values that shaped humans into creatures whose very perceptions and sensibilities
were attuned largely to that pursuit.
Much of the tradition of social thought that followed in Herder’s wake in
Germany, one that conceived of human society as an active project, could equally
well be seen as so many attempts to find some kind of common substance
underlying all these different forms of value. Hegel’s Phenomenology, which
organized each historic culture as one moment in a single project of the self-
realization of the human spirit, was perhaps the most ambitious. Marx often
seemed to be making fun of this tradition, as in the famous footnote in Capital
where he chided critics for objecting to his economic analysis of past ages, insisting
that for the Greeks, politics reigned supreme, in medieval Europe, religious faith,
and so on (Marx’s rejoinder of course is that it was necessary to understand the
material conditions that made such pursuits possible to begin with [(1867) 1977:
57n34]). But in the end, he was working squarely in the same tradition, and his
theory of value was ultimately another way of conceiving human creativity
(“production”) as the endless pursuit of alienated refractions of itself. Perhaps it’s
inevitable. Perhaps something like this necessarily follows if one starts not with the
idea of society as a collection of individuals or groups and then sets about to
understand how that society hangs together, as the French and British sociological
traditions tended to do, but rather, as the German does, as a mode of coordinating
projects of human action. If so, there must be some concept or conceptions of
value that set everything in motion; and if we are to assume that human beings are
on some level ultimately the same sorts of creature, we also have to assume that on
some ultimate level we are all pursuing the same sorts of thing.
* * *
This, at any rate, explains why value and values have always been more of a central
issue to American cultural anthropology, with its theoretical roots in the German
1
intellectual tradition, than in either Great Britain or France. These issues were
much at the fore during my own graduate training at the University of Chicago in
the late 1980s and early 1990s. From a student’s perspective at least, the
intellectual climate in the Chicago anthropology department at the time was
genuinely exhilarating. We felt we were at the brink of important theoretical break-
throughs; unpublished papers and counterpapers passed from hand to hand, or
were avidly hoarded; clashes during the discussion sessions of weekly seminars
took on what seemed like historical significance. In retrospect, if many of us are
now tempted to see the whole scene as vaguely ridiculous, it is probably because it
was the last moment when anthropologists really believed their own discipline was
in a position to make important theoretical interventions in many of the most imp-
ortant issues of Western social thought.
Were they? I am still convinced that, in some ways, they were right. This is
particularly true of value theory, a kind of volatile synthesis of Marx, Hegel, and
certain elements of structuralism (drawn less from Lévi-Strauss than from Piaget
and Dumont). Its chief avatars at the time were Terence Turner and Nancy Munn.
At the time, Turner’s most important work remained unpublished, circulating in
manuscript (e.g., 1984a, 1987, 1988, there were many others), often in multiple
drafts in notoriously difficult language, or if it had seen print, it was only in obscure
venues unavailable in most libraries (1979a, 1984b) or, at best (e.g., 1979b), lang-
uishing because it was written in a language that no one could really hope to
understand who had not heard Turner explain the concepts in person. As a result,
we had a sense that the promised revolution never quite happened, that the core
magic texts remained hidden, never quite to be revealed. When I conceived the
idea of writing my own Toward an anthropological theory of value (2001) in the
late 1990s, I originally thought of it as much as anything as an attempt to draw all
these texts and arguments out into the open—I imagined its appearance would be
followed by irate critiques from many of the principals insisting I had got their core
arguments wrong, and a flurry of productive debates. Nothing of the sort ensued.
Indeed, the book seems to have appeared at precisely the moment when the disci-
pline was collectively dismissing all such great debates as somehow passé, in fact,
anthropological theory itself (that is, theory that emerged from within anthropology
as opposed to theory borrowed from Continental philosophers) as tokens of airs
that anthropologists, with their colonial legacy, really ought not be putting on—even
itself as a kind of left-over, would-be intellectual imperialism.
Not all of that work has been lost. At the time, we often made a shorthand dis-
tinction between the structuralist camp (or structural-history camp), whose prime
avatars were Marshall Sahlins and Valerio Valeri, and the “value people.” Much of
the work of the first camp have, indeed, seen print and had an impact on the
discipline. But history has not treated the value camp well. Munn (1977, 1983,
1986) is now seen largely as a theorist, not of value but of time and space, and
1. Louis Dumont is a notable exception on the French side, but his own work was in
many ways a self-conscious attempt to synthesize the French and German traditions.
while Turner’s ideas did inspire a certain number of other scholars (e.g., Myers
1986, 1993, 2001; Sangren 1987a, 1987b, 2000; Fajans 1993, 1997; Holmberg
2000; Cepek 2008; White 2010, 2011) their overall impact on the discipline has
been extremely limited.
A valiant effort in the last decade by David Pederson and Paul Eiss (2002) to
bring value theory back to the center of debate in the middle of the last decade
similarly made little headway. In fact, even when in the course of it, versions of
some of the basic original texts did finally come to light (e.g. Turner 2006, 2008)
they attracted little attention. Again, not because these debates have been resolved.
They haven’t. They’ve simply been set aside.
True, there were other factors at play. Turner himself was always the very
opposite of an empire-builder. What’s more, when he did put out his core argu-
ments on value theory, he always framed them primarily as an argument about the
correct reading of Marx, or, at least, of the appropriate reading of Marx for a
Marxian anthropology—a subfield that increasingly can barely be said to exist—
rather than as a set of insights into the nature of human social life important in
their own right. My own intervention appeared at just the moment I was gaining
attention as an activist involved with the global justice movement. Apparently, it
seems difficult within the discipline to conceive of a fellow scholar as both a
theorist and activist at the same time, leading to the rather confusing situation (at
least it was confusing for me) where my deployment of even quite arcane elements
of value theory to political questions, or even to develop them in mass-circulation
venues like Harpers (e.g., Graeber 2005a, 2007a) sparked much more interest and
debate among a broader public than any of my scholarly essays on similar topics
(2005b, 2005c, 2006, 2011) did within the academy.
* * *
I write this not just as a way of lamenting the infatuations of my lost intellectual
youth but rather because I think anthropology might finally be emerging from the
near-suicidal crisis of faith that shook it in the 1980s, and be once again be able to
imagine itself as in a position to make major contributions to social theory in its
own right. (HAU itself is founded on the gamble that it is.) But I also think that in
order to do so, all these debates need to be put back on the table and understood
within the larger intellectual currents that created the discipline of anthropology in
the first place. This is why I began by emphasizing that Herder and Marx were
ultimately dealing with the same sorts of question.
This is what I tried to argue in Toward an anthropological theory of value as
well: that value will necessarily be a key issue if we see social worlds not just as a
collection of persons and things but rather as a project of mutual creation, as
something collectively made and remade. This is why most debates over Marx’s
deployment of the “labor theory of value” completely miss the mark. Marx’s
theory of value was above all a way of asking the following question: assuming that
we do collectively make our world, that we collectively remake it daily, then why is
it that we somehow end up creating a world that few of us particularly like, most
find unjust, and over which no one feels they have any ultimate control? This is
not an attempt to produce a scientific law, which can demonstrate how specific
2. Hence Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri’s (2000: 354–61) famous argument that the
“law of value” “can no longer be found” in current, postmodern capitalism is based on
the odd assumption that Marx was ever proposing a “law of value” to begin with—it’s
quite clear he was not. For the definitive demolition of the premise, and related
“transformation problem,” see Massimo De Angelis (2007: 158–59). My reading here
draws largely on Turner (1984a, 2008) who is in turn inspired in part by Diane Elson’s
(1979) “value theory of labor.”
What this suggests is that the system of exchange value does not just operate to
facilitate exploitation within the factory by disguising the fact that value comes from
labor, it operates on an even more insidious level by encouraging us to believe that
only certain forms of labor (waged labor, or at best, labor that contributes to
producing marketable commodities) produce value in the first place. It also
suggests something even more radical: that what is described in the Marxist liter-
ature as “reproductive labor,” housework, child care, the making, shaping, educa-
tion, nurturance, and maintenance of those who perform labor, should not be
viewed as some secondary phenomenon, the mere reproduction of a workforce
capable of producing marketable commodities, but rather, as the most elementary
form of real value-producing labor, as the very core and essence of human creative
life. The fact that capitalism represents it as the mere reproduction of a workforce
is the ultimate indication of its perversity, its systematic violation of the Kantian
categorical imperative that human beings should always be treated as ends and not
as means.
All this is not just an intervention—however radical—in Marxist theory. It opens
up all sorts of new perspectives on familiar problems. Most obviously, it provides
an elegant solution for the value/values problem. The entire field of anthropo-
logical value theory since the 1980s has been founded on a single intuition: the fact
that we use the same word to describe the benefits and virtues of a commodity for
sale on the market (the “value” of a haircut or a curtain rod) and our ideas about
what is ultimately important in life (“values” such as truth, beauty, justice), is not a
coincidence. There is some hidden level where both come down to the same thing.
If we examine the matter from the perspective of work, the problem is much
less of a mystery. We speak of value when labor is commoditized. On the market,
the value of any good or service ultimately comes down to that proportion of the
total pool of waged or salaried labor that is invested in producing it. The moment
we enter the world where labor is not commoditized, suddenly we begin talking
about values. What is the most common form of unpaid labor in our society?
Surely, housework. And what is the principle way in which values are invoked by
pundits and politicians? “Family values.” It’s quite the same with art, religion,
politics, or social justice—or even, for that matter, those aspects of the world of
work (loyalty, integrity) that do defy any calculus of profit.
It’s the role of money as universal equivalent that allows for the division. That
which is thus rendered comparable can be considered under the rubric of “value”
and this value, like that of money, lies in its equivalence. The value of “values” in
contrast lies precisely in their lack of equivalence; they are seen as unique,
crystallized forms. They cannot or should not be converted into money. Nor can
they be precisely compared with one another. No one will ever be able produce a
mathematical formula for how much it is fitting to betray one’s political principles
in the name of religion, or to neglect one’s family in the pursuit of art. True,
people do make such decisions all the time. But they will always resist formal-
3
ization—to even suggest doing so is at best odd, and probably offensive.
The role of money leads to the second crucial point of intervention.
3. Hence as Lambek (part two of this special issue) notes, such decisions are normally
framed in an entirely different category as calculation: as “judgments.” More on this
below.
4. In fact, as the preface indicates, Marx saw the question he was trying to answer in
writing the book as similarly a question of symbolic representation: why, he asks, in the
capitalist mode of production, is the value of labor represented in the form of a wage?
I think we might do well to think about the political implications of this fact. It may
well be one of the most important potential contributions of value theory, but it’s
been largely ignored. None of the articles in this collection, for instance, even
allude to them.
Turner himself applies his analysis to a Kayapo village (1995, 2003a, 2006),
which is always described as a circle of domestic compounds, arranged around a
central plaza with two men’s houses, divided into moieties. In everyday life, these
moieties are not especially important, but they are crucial in the realization of value,
since the consummate value—what Kayapo call “beauty”—is embodied most of all
in great communal rituals in which sponsors from one moiety give names and
present heirloom jewelry to initiates from the other side, and the community
expresses its ultimate solidarity and unity. Such beautiful events are always said to
transcend the petty power struggles of everyday life. In reality, however, this isn’t
really true. Power struggles inevitably lead to splits and as a result, no actually
existing Kayapo village has actually contained two moieties for almost a century.
The obvious question is, if it isn’t really the case, why does everyone none-
theless go on insisting that a proper village must have two moieties? This is not an
idle question. In a way, it is another way of restating the central theoretical question
of British social anthropology of the classic age: what are we actually referring to
when we speak of “social structure”? Anthropologists in the 1940s and 1950s
found they had no trouble eliciting very elaborate and elegant descriptions of seg-
mentary lineage structures, circulating connubium marriage systems, hierarchies of
chiefly offices, and the like, which could then be turned into schematic models that
could then be compared and contrasted in all sorts of fascinating ways, but these
often seemed to have very little to do with the much messier and contentious reali-
ties of what actually went on in small-scale communities. What did these models
actually represent? Were they ideals, realities, approximations, expressions of
some hidden logic, or something else entirely? Eventually, Edmund Leach (1954,
1982; see also Bloch 1971) was able to make a powerful case that social structures
of this kind didn’t really exist in any material sense at all; they were imaginative
constructs that were only realized during ritual moments—when dividing up the
carcass of a sacrificial ox, or installing a new earth priest—when “society” in this
total sense is momentarily brought into being: generally, so one can manipulate or
change it. Why this abstract model has to exist in the first place, however, remains
ambiguous: is it to answer some need for social or conceptual order, to provide an
anchor for structures of status and authority, or something more profound?
All this works well enough for the Kayapo. Indeed they might be considered a
classic case in point, since they are forced to somehow improvise the equivalent of
two moieties in order to conduct their beautiful naming ceremonies and other
important ritual events. At these moments, and these moments only, Kayapo
“society” is made to appear in its total form. But Turner’s formulation also offers a
much more compelling explanation of why it must be made to appear: in order to
provide an arena for the realization of social value.
The Kayapo are of course a classic, old-fashioned “village society,” where it is at
least possible to think of a single community as a total social system, and therefore,
a single arena—even though, as it turns out, such villages really exist only in
imaginary form. Even Nancy Munn’s “intersubjective spacetime” for the realization
of fame, extending beyond the island of Gawa to the entire kula chain, is a single
arena. How, then, to speak about such matters when there are multiple arenas? In
most of the places anthropologists study nowadays, there clearly are.
This is the traditional stomping-ground of sociologists and, indeed, sociologists
have had some interesting things to say here. Max Weber’s notion of status (or
stand), for example, proposed that there are always two sorts of value competition
going on. On the one hand, for any status group—and he’s thinking very broadly
here; this might include Junkers, doctors, monks, or artistic Bohemians—there is
an internal game, where members of a certain status group are vying over their own
peculiar notion of esteem; on the other hand, there is a larger struggle within the
society as a whole to establish that particular notion of esteem, and the style of life
with which it is associated, as the highest or most legitimate value (Weber 1978:
5
205–307; Wolk n.d.). Daniel Wolk provides a vivid—and telling—example. When
members of the student dueling societies of Weber’s day engaged in sword-fights
over slighted male honor, they were playing a game—with its logic of insult,
challenge, and duel with bladed weapons—that bears a remarkable resemblance to
the knife-fights typical of gang wars in twentieth-century Chicago or Los Angeles.
The internal struggle over honor took much the same form. Yet the dueling
societies, whose members—often of aristocratic background—were preparing
themselves for high posts in the civil service, managed to promote their sense of
status honor to the very pinnacle of German society, while the honor contested by
the gangs—or contemporary Crips and Bloods—is considered by the larger
American society to be the very most contemptible.
Granted, Weber’s focus on “status honor” betrays the ultimately aristocratic
inspiration of the concept, and this does somewhat limit its usefulness for our
purposes. It is actually quite useful to examine what we’ve come to call subcultures,
or similar identity-based groups; rather less than the more obviously value-based
universes that so multiply in contemporary societies: academia, fashion, sport, the
media, the art world. Still, it’s useful (and here I’m following Wolk again) to
compare his formulation with Pierre Bourdieu’s notion of social “fields” (1976,
6
1983, 1985; Vandenburghe 1999), which he developed to understand precisely
such phenomena. Each can, again, be imagined as a kind of game where the
players are vying to accumulate some form of “capital,” but at the same time, there
is a kind of higher level game, of dominance, subordination, and autonomy, where
the economic or political field will attempt to subsume the others, and fields like
academia or art are forced to adopt complex strategies to maintain their own
autonomy (hence, Bourdieu’s celebration of Baudelaire’s ideal of “art for art’s
sake,” or his justification of his own notoriously difficult prose style as a tactic for
defending the integrity of the intellectual field against incursions from the
economic or political ones). What Turner would add here is that this is what
politics is always ultimately about: not just to accumulate value, but to define what
value is, and how different values (forms of “honor,” “capital,” etc.) dominate,
encompass, or otherwise relate to one another; and thus at the same time, between
those imaginary arenas in which they are realized. In the end, political struggle is
7
and must always be about the meaning of life.
This point too deserves a little development because I think it provides a useful
corrective to much of the emphasis, in contemporary social theory, to questions of
“ontology.” At its sloppiest, at least, the term “ontology” is given the power to take
8
the place once given to “culture.” This strikes me as unfortunate, because it im-
plies that questions about the ultimate nature of reality actually matter to most
people; in actual practice, what seems striking is the degree to which they do not (cf.
Carrithers et al. 2010).
Let me give an example. There was a famous psychological experiment—it’s
usually called the Stanford Prison Experiment—in which researchers divided a
group of undergraduate volunteers into two groups and told one to pretend to be
prisoners and the other to be guards (Zimbardo 2008). They were to be left in a
basement for two weeks, the guards given absolute power. As most readers will
know (the experiment is very famous) the results were catastrophic: some prisoners
conceived plans to escape, the guards soon began designing sadistic rituals and
psychologically abusing those under their command. After six days, the experiment
had to be called off for fear someone would be seriously hurt. The experiment is
usually invoked as a demonstration of the dangers of authoritarian behavior, but
one could argue that what’s really striking about it is the fact that the participants
knew that the scenario was imaginary. They were perfectly well aware that they
were not in fact guards or prisoners but students doing an experiment, yet it
quickly turned into a kind of game (one side trying to escape and the others trying
to stop them), and once it had, none of that came to matter any more.
Anyone who has played a game understands how this can happen. In fact, if
people care about the stakes, it almost invariably does. Yet social theorists often
examines their history, one usually discovers that their very existence can be seen a kind
of political project, the creation of a field for the realization of certain forms of value.
8. In much the same way as “imaginary,” interestingly enough: see Strauss 2006.
the players in their pursuit of a certain form of value, if one is drawn into becoming
part of the audience in their arena, one simply accepts the terms of the attendant
universe, whatever its reality. To do otherwise would at best be vaguely obnoxious,
like interrupting a game to demand a group of fans explain why their favorite
9
footballer is not allowed to use his hands.
It is value, then, that brings universes into being. Whether anyone believes in
10
the reality of these universes is usually inconsequential. This, in turn, is what
makes it so easy, in contexts characterized by complex and overlapping arenas of
values, for so many actors to simply stroll back and forth between one universe and
another without feeling any profound sense of contradiction or even unease.
If this is true, the anthropological fascination with “cosmologies,” like the later
fascination with “ontologies” that largely grew out of it, might seem to entirely miss
the mark. But here I suspect things are actually a bit more complicated.
First of all, some obvious analogies between cosmological systems, narratives,
and games:
Any view of the cosmos must, first of all, be delimited in terms of space and time,
its epochs and dimensions often quite elaborately plotted out (“the classic Maya
recognized thirteen heavens, nine hells, and four quarters of the terrestrial world;
they saw themselves as living in the fifth great cosmic cycle . . . ”). Within that
universe, one must then ask, who are the actors, that is, what are the beings who
play a role in cosmic affairs—not just humans, but gods, ancestors, monsters,
Mistresses of the Seals, Founding Fathers, and so on—and what sort of powers do
they have? Then, finally, one must consider their motivations (insofar as these can
be known). What forms of value are considered worthy of pursuing, by humans
and other creatures? Even the gods, after all, must want something, or why would
they interest themselves in human affairs?
Now, ordinarily, we assume that for those who embrace these cosmic systems,
all this is the very definition of reality. But while this is clearly true in some cases, it
does not necessarily have to be. Consider for example the following passage in
Rane Willerslev’s intriguing essay on sacrifice in this very collection, in which he
contemplates the fact that Chukchi, and other Siberian peoples who practice ritual
sacrifice, will often claim ignorance, or not care, who the spirits to which they are
sacrificing might be. Belief is irrelevant:
11. This suggests that in the fact/values split, it is actually values that really come first. We
are used to the argument that one cannot derive values from facts, but historically, the
process was likely the reverse: the pursuit of facts, as such, can only be a consequence
of certain forms of value.
Incidentally this argument might seem a strange thing to say about science, or other
intellectual fields where truth itself is the highest value, but science is a relative late-
comer in the politics of value, and might be said to have formed as a field, anyway, in
relation to religions that had begun to make radical truth-claims themselves.
structions, or at the very least, which always contains some properties that extend
beyond anything we can think or say about it. That is both undeniable, yet ulti-
mately incomprehensible. As such they allow a similar Archimedian point, and
identifying oneself with such ultimate realities, a way of claiming the authority to
mediate between value spheres. It may even be that, just as scientific truth-claims
arose as (and to some degree still maintain themselves as) a kind of counter-
discourse to those of revealed religion, revealed religions themselves arose as a way
of playing this same game.
Yet even in such complex circumstances, this is just one move among many. In
most arenas, such truth claims, if they are made at all, retain that imaginative, as-if
quality.
Some excellent work on this phenomenon can be found in the essays collected
here. Horacio Ortiz (2013), for instance, writes compellingly about how this hap-
pens among securities analysts dealing in just the sort of financial derivatives that
caused the financial meltdown of 2008. While they thought of what they did
primarily as a work of producing value in the financial sense, it is clear that their
ultimate operative value was a notion of market efficiency derived from economic
theory, and, ultimately, a certain neoliberal orthodoxy—so much so that Ortiz
argues that while traders and analysts insisted “trading is just technical” and thus
beyond morality and politics, it was clear that the concept of value being employed
was, precisely, economic, moral, and political all at the same time. In fact, it was
effectively making claims to ultimate value on a planetary scale (Ortiz 2013: 75).
This notion of “efficiency” is a perfect example of an infravalue translated into a
metavalue. In principle, efficiency is never an end in itself, but, by definition, a
means of achieving something else; and free-market theorists insist that they make
no judgments on what sort of values consumers ultimately wish to pursue. Yet in
practice, and in ideology, through the notion of efficient markets and the
enormous apparatus of regulation that operate in their name, it is raised to the
status of a global criteria for how resources are distributed, and hence, in effect,
what sorts of value it is possible to pursue.
This switch of means into criteria between ends is the very essence of neo-
liberalism. But one could argue something along these lines occurs in almost any
political ideology. To take one obvious example, most twentieth-century state-
socialist regimes made an almost identical move when they argued that the need to
guarantee universal access to basic life needs (food, shelter, health care, etc.)
justified the suppression of freedom of religious, political, and cultural expression—
or at least, that sharply regulated which forms were permissible. Most of us wish to
12
secure access to basic life necessities precisely in order to pursue something else.
The political maneuvering that followed in the wake of the economic crash of
2008 might serve as a perfect case study in the politics of value. Certainly, much of
it makes no sense in any other terms. In Great Britain, the first political battle
came in the form of a broad program to “reform” the system of higher education,
which was to be reformed on market lines—in other words, to more closely resem-
ble the logic and structures of value typical of the financiers Ortiz described. At
first glance nothing could make less sense. The financial system, after all, had just
undergone an epic failure. The system of higher education, for all its eccentricities,
had been trundling along without a hitch. If politicians were really interested in
“what works,” the obvious thing would have been to remake the financial system to
be more like the educational system, rather than the other way around. But this
option was not even considered. Instead, all public discussion had to begin with
the premise that education was an economic good, that students pursue it only to
increase their future life income, and that the only public interest in maintaining a
system of higher education is to ensure an expanding total output of goods and
services for consumers. As a result, when a student movement emerged, with doz-
ens of occupations across the country, the very first demand in every case was a
recognition that education was not an economic good but a value in itself: that
wealth should be deployed to further human knowledge and understanding, rather
than the other way around.
12. The current Chinese government still does. And of course Right-wing regimes often
make precisely the same move with the need for physical security (“law and order”).
From the perspective being developed here, all this makes perfect sense. Over
the last twenty-five years, economists, investment bankers, derivative traders, and
their allies had achieved unprecedented global power and almost unimaginable
wealth, mainly by convincing the world that they had developed a scientific under-
standing of the creation of value. Then, in 2008, the very same people who had
presented themselves as almost godlike in their powers crashed the world econ-
omy, causing untold human misery owing to their collective inability to assess the
value even of their own financial instruments. Almost all the theoretical justifi-
cations for the current political culture (the idea that markets were self-regulating,
that financial analysts were willing or able to make accurate predictions, and so on)
lay in ruins. Clearly, the only defense in this case was a good offense, and those
political forces most closely aligned with the financial system began an immediate
campaign to subsume the educational system within their own structures of value
precisely because universities were the only likely place left in contemporary socie-
ty from which alternative conceptions of value might be developed and put forth.
The carbon-trading schemes discussed by Steffen Dalsgaard (2013, in part one
of this special issue) can only be understood in the same framework. What person
in their right mind would, after watching the avatars of the financial sector, through
a combination of fraud and willful blindness, sink their own economic system,
requiring massive bailouts from the public till, decide that it would be appropriate
to now put the fate of human civilization, perhaps of humanity itself, directly in
their hands? This may well be remembered as the very worst idea in human
history. (“Nature,” as one activist slogan went, “does not do bailouts.”) Again, it can
only make sense as a reassertion of the political power of that system to define
value, in this case, on a veritably cosmological level.
* * *
The attack on the universities suggests our work—our work on value theory in
particular, actually—has greater potential political significance than we are accust-
omed to think. Or, if nothing else, that some very powerful people seem to think it
does. Obviously, though, this potential will never be realized unless we develop a
language in which it is possible, when confronted with what is quite possibly the
worst idea in human history, to actually be able to say so. It’s not clear that the
ANT-inspired approaches that have largely been deployed so far, or for that matter
the theoretical apparatus assembled by Dalsgaard himself, really make it possible
to do so.
The problem, to adopt the terms of analysis developed above, is that we have
reached a point where the successful realization of value within the academic arena
itself tends to undercut any possibility of that value being considered politically
relevant outside. Whatever else one might say about Weber and Bourdieu, both
gave considerable thought to this dilemma. Increasingly, we are setting up theore-
tical terms that make it difficult to think about it at all; instead, the as-if quality of
the academic arena is allowing it to drift off from even being able to imagine it
might be relevant to anything outside itself.
Let me end, then, with a word about the Dumontian revival, which seems to
represent a strong theoretical current in this collection. Its most powerful statement
comes in the article by Joel Robbins (2013), entitled “Monism, pluralism, and the
structure of value relations: A Dumontian contribution to the contemporary study
of value.” One must give credit where credit is due; as a series of gambits within
the academic field, Robbins’ interventions have been far more effective than my
own rather ham-fisted efforts. Yet I fear adopting it would make it almost imposs-
ible to discuss the role of anthropology, or social theory in general, in these larger
politics of value themselves.
Much of the value theory of the 1980s and 1990s set out directly from Dumont
(e.g., Turner 1984b), but it also built on it, pointing out some of the obvious
theoretical flaws in his original formulation—as I have done myself in noting the
slipperiness of Dumont’s notion of hierarchical “inclusion” (Graeber 1997: 704–5),
or his odd insistence that all binary oppositions are always, necessarily based on a
logic of marked and unmarked terms (Graeber 2001: 16–20). At the time we
thought we were building something. Robbins apparently finds none of this work
useful in any way, beginning his piece with a deft dismissal of the entire literature:
since Dumont, he writes, no prominent anthropologist has directed “significant att-
ention to values” at all. Lest this statement come as a surprise for anyone familiar
with the work of Turner and Munn—or even, for that matter, Annette Weiner
(1985, 1992), Arjun Appadurai (1986), or Marilyn Strathern (1988)—Robbins does
provide a footnote explaining that “in making this statement, I am referring to the
study of ‘values’ in the plural—roughly, those things defined as good within a
society or social group. The study of ‘value’ in the singular, a notion often in one
way or another tied to Marxist or at least production-oriented points of view,
received some attention even during the period during which the topic of values in
the plural was almost wholly neglected” (2013: 100, n1). In other words, he is
reintroducing, in radicalized form, the very opposition that this literature was
attempting to challenge.
I must confess to a somewhat wistful feeling watching an intellectual tradition
that played a role in my own formation brushed aside quite so casually, but even
notwithstanding, it is worthy of note that Dumont himself did not really accept a
fundamental division between value and values either, except, in a very broad
sense, as a distinction between modern, individualistic societies where economic
value reigns supreme, and traditional, hierarchical, “normal” ones. In discussing
Melanesian currencies in his essay “On value” (and not, I note, “On values”), he
observes:
Those “primitive” moneys have to do with absolute value. Therefore
their relation to money in the modern, restricted sense of the term is
somehow homologous to the relation, among us, between value in the
general, moral or metaphysical sense and value in the restricted econo-
mic sense. In the background of both lies the contrast between cultural
forms that are essentially global and those in which the field is separated
out or decomposed into particular domains or planes, that is, roughly
speaking, between non-modern and modern forms. (Dumont 1986: 258)
This is a statement that actually sounds not very different from the perspective I’ve
been trying to develop here.
The only real difference is precisely that Dumont thinks there’s a fundamental
distinction between what he considers to be (a) holistic social systems—which can
exist on the scale of a Melanesian island or the entire South Asian subcontinent—
where values like wealth, power, and ritual purity, and the domains of life that are
organized around them, are themselves ranked into a single cosmological order,
seen as continuous with nature, and (b) our own modern, individualistic society in
which the overall structure has fragmented and the various domains lie casually
scattered about. It’s only societies like the first, holistic variety that he himself felt
could be systematically compared.
Robbins himself is less interested in thinking about that distinction than with
using his work to explore “the various ways monism and pluralism can relate to
each other in any given society” (2013: 105). This seems fair enough, but of course
everything rides on how a “given society” is to be defined. His own examples
include (1) Hasidic Jews in Brooklyn, (2) “Priestless Old Believers in Sepych, a
town of fourteen hundred people in the Russian Urals,” and (3) the Avatip and (4)
Urapmin of the Sepik River region of Papua New Guinea. He offers a series of
skillful and intriguing analyses of the different sorts of value that play important
roles in each, the different domains of life seen as organized around them, and
considers in each case the degree to which the result can or cannot be considered a
unified, holistic system. I do not wish to take issue with any of the specifics of his
analysis. They all seem quite sound. What I want to problematize is his use of the
term “society.” What does it mean to treat members of a religious minority group
living in a large city in America as the equivalent, for analytic purposes, to an ethno-
linguistic group in Melanesia? Obviously, anthropologists do this all the time, in a
way we have to if we’re going to engage in comparison of any kind; nonetheless,
when speaking of value arenas, the results, I think, can be genuinely problematic.
Doing so allows Robbins to examine how the use of three different languages
(Loshn-koydesh, reserved for scripture; Yiddish, employed at home; and English,
the language of practical affairs) allows for a hierarchy of value domains, all
organized around freeing men for study of the Torah, to further the ultimate value
of “the redemption of the Jewish people.” While the analysis works well in its own
terms, such a value can only be considered paramount if the community in
question is considered as a bounded entity, rather than as a group of people who
are equally, from some perspectives and in some contexts, American citizens,
members of the larger Jewish diaspora, and businessmen operating in local, nation-
al, and world markets. A Hasidic Jew in an airport, a police holding cell, or talking
to wholesale camera dealer, is not simply engaged in “practical affairs” but in each
case operating in a larger arena he or she has played little role in determining. In
any of these contexts, the totality has to be conceived quite differently, and as a
result, so does the overall relation of value spheres. But if this is true—and it
obviously is—it becomes clear that creating an imaginary totality that can be
described as if it were a single bounded arrangement of value domains, and in
which Torah study is the pinnacle, is itself a political project, and the analysis here
takes as its starting point the circle rather than the act of drawing it.
* * *
Is there a similarity between conscious projects of religious self-creation, like the
Hasidim or Old Believers, and groups like the Avatip and Urapmin? It’s actually
possible that there are. Perhaps Herder was more right than we think. Perhaps
most of the small-scale societies that anthropologists used to study as bounded
entities are better seen as themselves to some degree political projects, arenas for
the realization of certain conceptions of value that can only be understood in terms
of a much larger history in space and time (see e.g., Graeber forthcoming). Such a
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Department of Anthropology
London School of Economics
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