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First published online September 21, 2016

A crisis of measurability? Critiquing post-operaismo on labour, value and the basic income

Abstract

This article critiques post-operaist conceptualisations of immaterial labour from the perspective of Marxian value-form theory. Critiquing the idea of the ‘crisis of measurability’ created by immaterial labour and the contention that this makes redundant the law of value, it contests the novelty, immediate abstractness and immeasurable productivity post-operaists attribute to contemporary labour using the New Reading of Marx. The first part explores this theoretical conflict, asserting that post-operaismo refutes Marx’s value theory only insofar as it holds a productivist understanding of value to begin with. The second reflects upon the political implications through a consideration of the post-operaist advocacy of a universal basic income. Appeals to reward, recompense and redistribution rest upon the veracity of the claims made in the post-operaist treatment of labour, value and their immateriality and immeasurability. A value-form analysis exposes flaws in the assumptions about value and labour that support their case for a universal basic income.

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Biographies

Frederick Harry Pitts is a PhD researcher on the ESRC Global Political Economy pathway in the Department of Social and Policy Sciences at the University of Bath and the School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies at the University of Bristol. His current research examines how Marxist theory understands changes in contemporary labour, with reference to a case study of work the creative industries. He is a member of the Foundation for European Progressive Studies Young Academics Network working group on the Basic Income.

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Article first published online: September 21, 2016
Issue published: February 2018

Keywords

  1. New Reading of Marx
  2. post-operaismo
  3. Negri
  4. immaterial labour
  5. abstract labour
  6. value
  7. measure
  8. basic income

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Frederick Harry Pitts

Notes

Frederick Harry Pitts, Department of Social & Policy Sciences, University of Bath, Claverton Down, Bath, BA2 7AY, UK. Email: [email protected]

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