Patricia Spyer, *J ., gd^T^^W 182 Vrieš IH de (1921-22) "Godsdienstige Gebruiken en ChristeUjke Overblijf-' Jsľlen inlľResidentie Amboina," Nederlandsch-Inäié Oud en Nteuw 6: 111-23. Wallace, Alfred Russell (1962 [1869]) The Malay Archipelago, New York: Dover Publications.. Inc. Wilentz, Sean (ed.) (1985) Rites of Pover, Philadelphia: University of Pennsyl-vania Press. Marx's Coat Peter Stalrybrass 1. Fetishizing Commodities, Fetishizing Things Marx defines capitalism as the universalizing of the production of commodities. He writes in the Preface to the first edition of Capital that "the commodity-form of the product of labour, or the value-form of the commodity" is "the economic cell-form" (Marx 1976 [1867]: 90).' The "economic cell-form" that occupies the first chapter of Capital takes the form of a coat. The coat makes its appearance not as the object that is made and worn but as the commodity that is exchanged. And what defines the coat as a commodity, for Marx, is that you cannot wear it and it cannot keep you warm. But while the commodity is a cold abstraction, it feeds, vampire-like, on human labour. The contradictory moods of Marx's Capital are an attempt to capture the con-tradictoriness of capitalism itself: the most abstract society that has ever existed; a society that consumes ever more concrete human bodies. The abstraction of this society is represented by the commodity-form itself. For the commodity becomes a commodity not as a thing but as an exchange value. It achieves its purest form, in fact, when most emptied out of particularity and thingliness. As a commodity, the coat achieves its destiny as an equivalence: as 20 yards of linen, 10 lb. 184 Peter Stattybrass of tea, 40 lb. of coffee, 1 quarter of wheat, 2 ounces of gold, half a ton of iron (Marx 1976 [1867]: 157). To fetishize the commodity is to fetishize abstract exchange-value—to worship, that is, at the altar of the Financial Times or The Wall Street Journal which trace the number of paper cups that will buy you an academic book, the number of academic books that will buy you a Cuisinart, the number of Cuisinarts that will buy you a snowmobile. In Capital, Marx's coat appears only immediately to disappear again, because the nature of capitalism is to produce a coat not as a material particularity but as a "supra-sensible" value (Marx 1976 [1867]: 165). The work of Marx's Capital is to trace that value back through all its detours to the human labor whose appropriation produces capital (see Scarry 1985). This leads Marx theoretically to the labor theory of value and to an analysis of surplus-value. It leads him politically to the factories, the working conditions, y the living spaces, the food, and the clothing of those who produce a wealth that is expropriated from them. The coat—the commodity with which Marx begins Capital—has only the most tenuous relation to the coat that Marx himself wore on his way to the British Museum to research Capital. The coat that Marx wore went in and out of the pawnshop. It had very specific uses: to keep Marx warm in winter; to situate him as a suitable citizen to be admitted to the Reading Room. But the coat, any coat, as an exchange-value is emptied out of any useful function. Its physical existence is, as Marx puts it, "phantom-like": If we make abstraction from [the commodity's] use-value, we abstract also from the material constituents and forms which make it a use-value. ... All its sensuous characteristics are extinguished (Marx 1976 [1867]: 128). Although the commodity takes the shape of a physical thing, the "commodity-form" has "absolutely no connection with the physical nature of the commodity and the material [dinglich] relations arising out of this" (Marx 1976 [1867]: 165). To fetishize commodities is, in one of Marx's least-understood jokes, to reverse the whole history of fetishism/For it is to tetishize the invisible, the immaterial the supra-sensible. The fetishism of the commodity inscribes immateriality as the defining feature of capitalism. Thus, for Marx, fetishism is not the problem; the problem is the fetishism of commodities. So what does it mean that the concept of "fetishism" continues to be used primarily in a negative way, often with the explicit invocation of Marx's use of the term? This is the ges- Marx's Coat 185 ture of exploitation that established the term in the first place. As William Pietz has brilliantly argued, the "fetish" emerges through the trading relations of the Portuguese in West Africa in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries (Pitez 1985,1987). Pietz shows that the fetish as a concept was elaborated to demonize the snppnspHiy arhitrary at. tachment of West Afriraps tn mat^ri?) "^jycts Th° European subject was constituted in opposition tn a dpmnni7Pd fpti ttlattoa be-tween money, commodities, and things in "Reading Capital with Little Nell." 2. For Marx and commodity fetishism, see Marx 1976 [1867], pp. 163-77. For Marx's assertion of the necessity of "alienation" in the positive form of the imbuing of objects with subjectivity through our work upon them and of the imbuing of the subject with objectivity through our materializations, see his "On James Mill," in Marx 1977, pp. 114-23. 3. For an analysis of the history of the changing relations between subject and object in early modem Europe, see de Grazia, Quilligan, and Stally-brass (1995). 4. For development and critiques of Mauss's theory, see Gregory 1983; Weiner 1985 and 1992; Appadurai 1986; Strathern 1988; Thomas 1991; Der-rida 1992. 5. My account of the day to day life of the Marx household draws above all on Marx's constant stream of letters to Engels, published in Karl Marx and Frederick Engels, Collected Works (1975-). I have also found particularly useful Draper 1985; McLellan 1981; Marx 1973; Seigel 1978; Padover 1978; Kapp 1972. 6. On the 20th February, Marx wrote to Joseph Weydemeyer: "I have been so beset by money troubles that I have not been able to pursue my studies at the Library" (Marx and Engels 1983a [1852-55[: 40). 204 Peter Stallybrass 7. On the Marxes, their debts, and their visits to the pawnshop during the 1850s and 1860s, see, for instance, Marx 1982 [1844-51], pp. 224, 402, 556-57; Marx 1983a [1852-55], pp. 181-82,216, 385; Marx 1983b [1856-59], pp. 70, 255, 328-30, 360; Marx 1985 [1860-64[, pp. 380, 399, 433, 442, 445, 570-71, 577; McLellan (1981), pp. 22-29, 35-36, 149. 8. For Marx's own detailed account of his debts in 1858, see Marx (1983b [1856-59]), pp. 329-30. 9. Both quotes are taken from the OED under "tallyman." 10. Both quotations are taken from the OED under "fustian." 11. See, for example, Marx's description of the death of his wife's uncle as "a very happy event [in English]," Marx 1983a [1852-55]: 526. 12. I would emphasize that I am analysing here the structural relation between the object and the commodity. The actual relations between pawnbrokers and their customers were highly variable. As Tebbutt notes, "the pledge shop was firmly rooted in the community and trusted in a way which external organizations Pike banks] were not" (Tebbutt 1983: 17). And there was sometimes an air of carnival at the Saturday gatherings at the pawnshop (see Ross 1993:47). 13. On clothes and memory, see Stallybrass 1993: 35-50. 14. The inscription of loss within the act of purchase was a feature of everyday life for those who regularly used the pawnbroker. Melanie Tebbutt notes that the poor "had, in fact, a qualitatively different view of material resources, which they regarded as a tangible asset to be drawn on in periods of financial difficulty. When buying sales goods the poor habitually asked what they would fetch if offered in pawn, and frequently confessed they were influenced in their choice by the articles' potential pledge value" (Tebbutt 1983:16). See also Annelies Moors's essay in this collection. She notes that richer Palestinian women tend to buy jewelry made of gold of relatively low value but that has been highly worked. Poorer women, on the other hand, tend to buy jewelry made of unworked gold of higher value, since they need to get the highest possible value for it if and when they pawn it. 15. For a fascinating analogy, see again Annelies Moors's essay. 16. Not only did women do most of the pawning; it was their own clothes that they most commonly pawned to raise money for the household. In a breakdown of the clothes pawned in 1836, 58 percent of garments clearly gender-identified were women's, while a significant percentage of the rest could have been either men's or women's. See Tebbutt 1983: 33. 17. In fact, despite the ideological association of Jews and pawnbroking, pawnbrokers were not mainly Jewish in nineteenth-century England (see Hudson 1982: 39). Marx's Coat 205 References Andersen, Hans Christian (1982 [1849]) Eighty Fairy Tales, trans. R. P. Keig-win, New York: Pantheon. Appadurai, Arjun (1986) "Introduction: Commodities and the Politics of Value" in Arjun Appadurai (ed.) The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 3-63. Derrida, Jacques (1992) Given Time: 1. Counterfeit Money, trans. Peggy Kamuf, Chicago: the University of Chicago Press, pp. 34-70. Dickens, Charles (1994 [1833-39]) Sketches by Boz and Other Early Papers, 1833-39, ed. Michael Slater, Columbus: Ohio State University Press. 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