Philosophy @ UWS Seminars 2014
The Writing and Society Research Centre and Philosophy @ UWS present:

Dr Dinesh Wadiwel
School of Social and Political Sciences, The University of Sydney


TITLE: Like One Who is Bringing his Own Hide to Market: Marx, Derrida and 
Animal Commodification

DATE/TIME: Wednesday April 30, 3.30 pm - 5.00 pm

PLACE: University of Western Sydney, Bankstown Campus, Building 3, Room 3.G.27  
[How to get to Bankstown 
Campus]<http://www.uws.edu.au/campuses_structure/cas/campuses/bankstown>

Abstract:
In an evocative line in Capital, Marx states that the worker under capitalism 
has "brought his own hide to market and now has nothing else to expect but - a 
tanning." This is not the first reference to "tanning" in Capital ; indeed in 
some respects the process of submitting one's own skin for exchange appears for 
Marx as a persistent metaphor for the commodification of human labour.

But what about animal labour? Can we use the tools that Marx offers to provide 
an account for the specific exploitation of animals within capitalism and other 
economic systems? Examining the first chapter of Marx's Capital vol. 1 - "The 
Commodity" - and Marx's exploration on money in Grundrisse, this paper will 
explore the imposition of a value equivalence upon the life (and death) of the 
animal within industrialised animal production. Noting that livestock were some 
of the first examples of "money" used in exchange, I will argue that 
commodification of animals does not focus on merely recognizing value in the 
form of exchange value, but realizes value in a side by side process of 
fostering species differentiation between human and non human.

Turning to Jacques Derrida's 1971 essay "White Mythology," I will explore 
Derrida's examination of the metaphor and its connection (or lost connection) 
to original value. I will argue, in line with Derrida's later concern with the 
term "animal" itself, that the imposition of value is always a violent form of 
metaphoricisation that threatens to flatten our multiple difference. As Derrida 
discusses, the commodity that poses as money is worn down through the process 
of exchange. In this sense the commodity value of animals as property might be 
understood as an intertwining process of material and epistemic violence - a 
literal and metaphoric "skinning" of the animal.

This paper aims to reanimate consideration of a political economy of animals 
within contemporary industrialised (and post-industrialised) capitalism, with a 
view to mapping forms of political subjectivity, collectivity and resistance

Dinesh 
Wadiwel<http://sydney.edu.au/arts/sociology_social_policy/staff/profiles/dinesh.wadiwel.php>
 is lecturer and Director of the Master of Human Rights, School of Social and 
Political Sciences, University of Sydney. His book, The War Against Animals, is 
forthcoming with Rodopi Press, and he is currently working on a co-edited 
collection with Matthew Chrulew entitled Foucault and Animals

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For further information in Philosophy@UWS, please visit: 
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- - - - - - - - -

Mariana Fragueiro
Administration Coordinator, Philosophy Research Initiative
University of Western Sydney
Bankstown Campus Building 5
Locked Bag 1797
Penrith NSW  2751
+61 2 9772 6190




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