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Immaterial LabourM.
Lazzarato: ‘Il lavoro immateriale’, C. Marazzi ‘ Il posto dei Calzini’ Lean
production, post-fordism, general intellect, mass intellectuality, subjectivity Marx, Negri,
Lazzarato, Marazzi, Virno, Sohn-Rethel |
The idea of immaterial
labour comes be theorised as a result of the changes in the mode of
capitalist production identified as post-Fordism. The Italian tradition of
operaismo links the notion of immaterial labour to the move from Fordist to lean
production (or Toyotism), where prior to being manufactured, a product must
be sold. More specifically defined, immaterial labour refers to two different
aspects of labour. According to Lazzarato:
1.
‘as
regards the ‘informational content’ of the commodity, it refers directly to the
changes taking place in workers’ labour processes in big companies in the
industrial and tertiary sectors, where the skills involved in direct labour are
increasingly skills involving cybernetics and computer control (and horizontal
and vertical communication).’
2.
‘As
regards the activity that produces the ‘cultural content’ of the commodity,
immaterial labour involves a series of activities that are not normally
recognised as ‘work’ – in other words, the kinds of activities involved in
defining and fixing cultural and artistic standards, fashions, tastes, consumer
norms, and more strategically, public opinion.’
The idea that immaterial
labour directly produces the capital relation, -something that material labour
hiddenly did- changes the phenomenology of capital. Immaterial workers are
primarily producers of subjectivity.
‘If production today is
directly the production of a social relation, then the ‘raw material’ of
immaterial labour is subjectivity and the ‘ideological’ environment in which
subjectivity lives and reproduces. The production of subjectivity ceases to be
only an instrument of social control (for the production of mercantile
relationships) and becomes directly productive, because the goal of our post
industrial society is to construct the consumer/communicator –and to construct
it as ‘active’. Immaterial workers (those who work in advertising, fashion,
marketing, television, cybernetics, and so forth) satisfy a demand by the
consumer and at the same time establish that demand.’ (M. Lazzarato)
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A Treatise on Political
Economy, Book I, Chapter XIII: Of Immaterial
Products, or Values Consumed at the Moment of Production. Jean-Baptiste Say General
Intellect: Towards an Inquiry into Immaterial Labour. Maurizio Lazzarato A
Critique of the Fordism of the Regulation School. Ferruccio Gambino European
Cultural Tradition and the New Forms of Production and Circulation of
Knowledge. Maurizio Lazzarato |
Against
a defense of the autonomy of culture, here Lazzarato argues how truth and
aesthetic values are fully integrated in the production of wealth |
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Resources |
EE’s
notes
on Intellectual and Manual Labour |
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Bibliography |
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