劳动的种族理论:从殖民奴隶制到后殖民移民的种族资本主义

IF 0.9 4区 社会学 0 PHILOSOPHY Historical Materialism-Research in Critical Marxist Theory Pub Date : 2023-10-05 DOI:10.1163/1569206x-bja10018
Nicholas De Genova
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引用次数: 2

摘要

重新考虑奴隶制在巩固全球资本积累制度中的关键历史作用,为我们的后殖民时代提供了马克思主义批判的重要来源。大西洋奴隶贸易把非洲的男人和女人变成了人类的商品。人类沦为人类商品或“人力资本”——实际上,沦为劳动,除了劳动之外什么都不是——这是现代奴隶制的本质,是巩固和完善马克思所谓的“抽象劳动”的必要前提,并要求我们重新定位被奴役的劳动,作为我们如何理解资本主义下的劳动的定义和构成限制。抽象劳动的生产,或“一般”劳动,依赖于社会政治差异的具体生产,特别是种族烙印。“黑”这个词,被设计成字面上和象征性地标记被奴役的人的肉体,也被设计成表明他们的残酷退化的特殊社会政治状况,作为征服劳动的最终极限。黑色命名了这个限制。因此,在资本主义制度下,黑性对于理解劳动本身是必要的。马克思对雇佣劳动的尖锐批判总是被奴隶制作为其极限形象的长期阴影所困扰。如果我们理解劳动是资本的对立面,那么在某种程度上,黑性命名了劳动对资本的从属和服从的最终条件,我们需要认识到资本下的所有劳动都被推向黑性(或近似黑性)的社会政治条件的趋势,黑性不命名任何一种基本身份,而是这种从属/服从的种族化的社会政治条件。因此,劳动价值论- -事实上,更准确地说,它一直是劳动价值论- -必须用我们可以假定为种族劳动理论的东西加以补充。然而,这样一个表面上的历史视角,关于奴隶制在资本主义起源中的基础作用,不仅仅是“原始积累”历史编纂中的学术实践,而是必须重新定位,以详细阐述迄今尚未发展的马克思主义移民劳动理论。从马克思的语料库中推断出劳动种族理论的关键见解,本文最终关注奴隶制为资本主义提供所有劳动力的定义视界的方式,以及这种见解如何有助于理解在我们的全球/后殖民社会政治秩序中移民劳工的种族化从属关系。
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A Racial Theory of Labour: Racial Capitalism from Colonial Slavery to Postcolonial Migration
Abstract A reconsideration of the crucial historical role of slavery in the consolidation of the global regime of capital accumulation provides a vital source of Marxian critique for our postcolonial present. The Atlantic slave trade literally transformed African men and women into human commodities. The reduction of human beings into human commodities, or ‘human capital’ – indeed, into labour and nothing but labour – which was the very essence of modern slavery, served as a necessary prerequisite for the consolidation and perfecting of what Marx called ‘labour in the abstract’, and requires us to re-situate enslaved labour as the defining and constitutive limit for how we comprehend labour as such under capitalism. The production of labour in the abstract, or labour ‘in general’, depended nonetheless upon concrete productions of sociopolitical difference , particularly the branding of race. The term ‘Black’, which was devised to literally and figuratively brand the flesh of enslaved people, was also contrived to signify their particular sociopolitical condition of brutal degradation as the ultimate limit for the subjugation of labour. Blackness names that limit. Thus, Blackness is in fact necessary for apprehending labour as such under capitalism. Marx’s scathing critique of wage labour is always haunted by the long shadow of slavery as its limit figure. If we comprehend labour to be the antithesis of capital, then to the extent that Blackness names the ultimate condition of labour’s subordination and subjection to capital, we need to recognise the tendency for all labour under capital to be pressed toward a sociopolitical condition of Blackness (or approximating Blackness), where Blackness does not name any kind of essential identity but the racialised sociopolitical condition of that subordination/subjection. Consequently, the labour theory of value – which has always been in fact, more accurately, a value theory of labour – must be complemented with what we might posit to be a racial theory of labour. Such an ostensibly historical perspective on the foundational role of slavery in the genesis of capitalism is no mere scholastic exercise in the historiography of ‘primitive accumulation’, however, but rather must be re-purposed toward the ends of elaborating what has remained an as-yet underdeveloped Marxian theory of migrant labour. Extrapolating key insights from Marx’s corpus for the formulation of a racial theory of labour, this essay is ultimately concerned with the ways that slavery supplies capitalism with a defining horizon for all labour, and thus how this insight might instructively serve to comprehend the racialised subordination of migrant labour within our global/postcolonial sociopolitical order.
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: Historical Materialism is an interdisciplinary journal dedicated to exploring and developing the critical and explanatory potential of Marxist theory. The journal started as a project at the London School of Economics from 1995 to 1998. The advisory editorial board comprises many leading Marxists, including Robert Brenner, Maurice Godelier, Michael Lebowitz, Justin Rosenberg, Ellen Meiksins Wood and others. Marxism has manifested itself in the late 1990s from the pages of the Financial Times to new work by Fredric Jameson, Terry Eagleton and David Harvey. Unburdened by pre-1989 ideological baggage, Historical Materialism stands at the edge of a vibrant intellectual current, publishing a new generation of Marxist thinkers and scholars.
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