Phil Graham on Fri, 14 Jan 2000 18:20:06 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Post re "the gift" and apologies to Nik |
Following is a post is a response to me by Keith Hart from Cybersociety that I think offers a clear and hopeful view of 'the gift'. While I'm here, I'd like to apologise to Nik, who took some offense at the language and tone of my previous post. I didn't intend any offense, but I stand by my arguments nevertheless. My bluntness (not meant to be abuse or rudeness) was, in large part, a function of my current lack of time. Regards to all, Phil --------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Jan 11 2000 11:35:39 EST From: Keith Hart <HART_KEITH@compuserve.com> Subject: The gift economy There was far too much in Phil's posting to take up at once, but, as someone who has sepnt some time exploring economic anthropology, I wondered if the following might be of interest to list members. The issue is less one of whether giving is new or more important in the context of internet exchange, but rather whether giving ever constitutes something identifiable as "the gift economy". The use of such a phrase does imply something whole and self-sufficient which would justify a riposte that giving takes place within an economy which is predominantly capitalist. In any case this phrase comes from a literature which bases itself on Mauss's pioneering work, The Gift, yet which, I would argue, fundamentally corrupts his orginal intentions. Apologists for capitalism used to argue that exchange was once altruistic, but is now selfish, claiming that a social economy is "primitive" and the "modern" economy regrettably, but inevitably individualistic. He sought to show that all exchange, whether taking the form of gifts or of markets, is founded on reciprocity and this involves the need to reconcile individual and social interests, to be self-reliant and to belong to others at the same time, a human necessity if we are to live together in society, but one which is very hard to realise in practice. He tried to demonstrate that gift-exchange was both communal and highly individualistic, just as his uncle, Emile Durkheim, had shown the hidden social foundations of the market economy. Yet subsequent generations of intellectuals have persisted in constructing gift and market as opposed types of economy. Having said this, Mauss insisted that there were logical and practical differences between the two forms of exchange. For one thing the gift is not reciprocated immediately and this leaves the giver in a temporary position of social superiority, whereas the instant equivalence of markets allows transactors to walk away from the excahnge as independent equals. But, as any Marxist could point out and Mauss knew, things are not as simple as that in markets dominated by money capital. He resisted the idea that, once we have identified the dominant form of an economy, there is nothing left to be said about alternative modes of exchange. In terms of the construction of new relationships, it does make a difference whether a couple on a date go dutch or the woman allows the man to pay for them both. If she thinks there is no difference, she has been living a sheltered life. It also makes a difference whether software is distributed on the net according the principle of copyright or copyleft. One reason for an increased sense of freedom of exchange on the internet is the cost revolution entailed in the cheapening of information. If sending a file by e-mail costs so much less in terms of all kinds of resources than photocopying, post and packaging, it opens up more liberal conditions for the exchange of information. Even if the internet is a creature of capitalism, there have always been strategies for ordinary people to claw back something of the value of what they produce. When such practices are identified as "the informal economy" (again a misleading expression, if it implies the absence of dialectical relations to the dominant forms), we can only note that what was taken in the 70s to be an insignificant sector of the total economy is today recognised to be very large in scope at all levels including the global. So it is possible for practices which are objectively minor to provide a site in which alternatives to the currently dominant economic form are developed. Keith Hart # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net