EASA Conference, 20-23 July 2016, University of Milano-Biccoca
P51: <http://nomadit.co.uk/easa/easa2016/panels.php5?PanelID=4370> Works that Matter (not): Valuing Productivity Through and Against the Market
Dear all,
Please, consider proposing a paper to our panel Works that Matter (not): Valuing Productivity Through and Against the Market<http://nomadit.co.uk/easa/easa2016/panels.php5?PanelID=4370>.
Taking 'productivity' broadly, this panel will explore the contested boundaries between 'work' and 'non-work', productive and unproductive today, and what an anthropological theory of value can add to its understanding. We are especially interested in moments where social importance and the market value, the processual and the commodified seem to connect again - be it in superfluity and devaluation, in doubts in meaningfulness of a job, or in embedded work ethics and creativity morale that are independent from but feed into broader market circuits, for example. We hope to gather papers that will explicitly explore the theoretical and the political opening points of such situations.
Find further information on the panel below,. You can submit a paper here: http://nomadit.co.uk/easa/easa2016/panels.php5?PanelID=4370 . The call for papers is already open and will close soon, on 15 February.
We are looking forward to receiving exciting papers and having engaging discussions!
Best,
Andre and Ivan
Convenors:
Ivan Rajkovic (UCL)
Andre Thiemann (Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology)
Chair: Andrea Muehlebach (University of Toronto)
Discussant: tba
Short Abstract
Following recent polemics on the contested boundary between the productive and the unproductive, work and non-work, this panel asks what an anthropological focus on value and valuation can add to an understanding of the ambiguous importance of human action in late capitalist worlds today.
Long Abstract
For a while, arguments have abounded that late capitalism is approaching 'the end of work' (Rifkin), where processes of technological change, financialisation and rent-seeking make labour unimportant. Recently, however, we have seen how neoliberalism did not simply re/devalue different forms of labour, but created an entire 'value-anxiety' (Sykes), a situation in which boundaries between activity and inactivity, production and destruction, 'work' and 'non-work' became contested, blurred and reshaped. Ethnographies of contemporary capitalism document new forms of human creativity and dedication, and new, conflicting ways of valuing which ones are 'real', meaningful, useful or desirable. These sometimes oppose market commodification, but also relate more ambivalently to it: creating forms of meaning, ethos and status that mimic, convert into, or simply help markets run.
Following recent anthropological quests for a holistic theory of value and valuation, we seek to explore where this value ambiguity of human action today may lead us theoretically and politically. We ask: what new opportunities arise when the boundary between the exchange value and the social importance, the commodified and the processual becomes porous again?
Taking 'productivity' broadly, potential topics include:
1) doubts in work's value: 'simulated' (Roberman), 'bullshit' (Graeber) and 'unproductive' jobs
2) productivity ethos and hidden everyday labours of maintaining wider social wholes
3) regaining self-worth in unemployment, superfluity and devaluation
4) financialisation, new markets, and new forms of (un)commodified creativity
5) rhetoric and pragmatics of distinguishing valuable, valueless, and negative activity
6) anthropology's position in arguments for and against 'work'.
Dr Ivan Rajkovic
UCL Mellon Post-Doctoral Fellow
School of Slavonic and East European Studies
University College London
16 Taviton Street London WC1H 0BW
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Tel: +44(0)20 7679 4838
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/ssees/people/ivan-rajkovic
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