“Was not their mistake once more bred of the life of slavery that they had been living?—a life which was always looking upon everything, except mankind, animate and inanimate—‘nature,’ as people used to call it—as one thing, and mankind as another, it was natural to people thinking in this way, that they should try to make ‘nature’ their slave, since they thought ‘nature’ was something outside them” — William Morris


Saturday, April 2, 2011

Gift Ecology




My friend Scott Shershow comes down on the side of the gift in his The Work and the Gift (sorry for the plot spoiler...).

Nature is a perpetual gift according to capitalist ideology. As Cameron Tonkinwise points out, "Mike Beard (State Senator, Republican, Shakopee, Minnesota) is getting media coverage for saying, 'God is not capricious. He’s given us a creation that is dynamically stable. We are not going to run out of anything.' " See my book The Poetics of Spice. Eternal abundance as the capitalist myth. Peel open a Puritan work ethicist and you'll find a drifty opium head.

Yet Cameron then argues, "An important opportunity in relation to the development of more sustainable futures (because less materials intense, but also with different socialities) is the re-emergence of sharing systems." Now watch the video.

Interesting yes? Online scholarship is surely part of this.

Okay, let's articulate the differences between this and the traditional circuit of modernity:

Nature as eternal gift < > human hoarding and consumerism

1 comment:

Joe Clement said...

RE: Sustainable Development and Sharing Systems!

Yes! I have been saying for a couple years now that sharing a common resource is more sustainable than having your own self-contained chunk of it. For example, we have a tool-library just down the street. We share over 100 kinds of tools (at least a thousand individual tools), from hammers to table-saws and more. Every member in the community doesn't need to own a personal set of their own, manage it and any private sharing-relations they /may/ put it into, and thereby the whole community consumes a lot less in these tools. I discovered this wonderful place when I was discussing the idea of a more general sort of durable-goods library with my partner. I mean, hell, books are a durable good; tools are a durable good; how much other sometimes useful stuff do we buy for ourselves and encourage industrially that we could simply share?