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8/10/2019 On the Social Life of Things _ Practical Aesthetics
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On The Social Life of ThingsPosted on September 27, 2011
In The Social Life of Things (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011), Arjun Appadurai argues for a
methodological fetishism of commodities in analyzing the societies in which they circulate:
we have to follow the things themselves, for their meanings are inscribed in their forms, their
uses, their trajectories. It is only through the analysis of these trajectories that we can interpret the
human transactions and calculations that enliven things. Thus, even though from a theoretical
point of view human actors encode things with significance, from a methodologicalpoint of view it
is the things-in-motion that illuminate their human and social context. (5)
Drawing on Simmel, he declares that Economic exchange creates value, and he proposes that the commodity
situation in the social life of any thing be defined as the situation in which its exchangeability (past, present,
future) for some other thing is its socially relevant factor (3, 13). Appaduris definition of the commodity
situation is based on an understanding of the commodity not as a thing-in-itself but as a certain social
relationship with the thing. By virtue of its social and cultural context, the thing moves into and out of its
commodity status. (Appadurai also speaks of the commodity phase in the life of the thing (13).) Some things,
Appadurai suggests, spend more time than not as commodities, others tend toward the opposite pole, but the
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potential of any thing to become a commodity is only one aspect of its social existence.
What the definition does not make clear, and what is complicated further by several of Appadurais later examples
and analogies, is whether the reverse is true. If a thing is not always a commodity, is a commodity always a thing?
Appadurai would seem to say no. He takes a lot from Mauss, and while he discusses nonmonetized, preindustrial
economies he remains strictly (methodologically) on the trail of the things themselves. However, as he moves
toward comparing these cultures to our own, Appadurai slips consistently into a discussion of information
exchange over and above object exchange. In his explanation of the methods by which elite regimes of value tend
perpetuate their own status in their attitudes toward things, Appadurai compares the exclusivity and sumptuary
laws of early societies, laws designed to designate certain objects and classes of objects as fit only for kings or
ruling classes, to modern systems of fashion which, absent any exclusivity in actual commodity ownership, create
complex and ever-changing sign systems out of democratically available commodities. In his discussion oftournaments of value, which he defines as complex periodic events that are removed in some culturally well-
defined way from the routines of economic life, Appadurai compares the set of ritual practices associated with the
kula with those of the Chicago Grain Futures Exchange (21). He illuminates in both of these examples striking
similarities in the sortsof cultural practices regarding value that seemingly very different types of societies share.
Just as in the kula, in which cultural elites vie for power and prestige through the exchange of a very particular set
of things, so too do the traders on the futures exchange attempt to corner the market in particular commodities. In
his effort to demonstrate similarities, however, Appadurai seems to lose track of the very things that his
methodology has set out to follow.
Follow the things tracks very nicely for each of his premodern examples. In sumptuary law, it is the right to
thingsthat is restricted, and the value of a thingits political power (broadly construed) is largely based upon
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its presence. When there are only a few things to be had, and the king has them all, then the king sets himself
apart from the masses by the having itself, the presence of the thing. Likewise, in the kula, the tournament of
value takes place in relation to the exchange of things, of shells and bracelets, the quantity and quality of which
determineby social designationthe status of the respective exchangers.
The thing, on the other hand, is notably absent from both modern-day examples. (I mean the thing in its most
material sense. A physical object against which we might stub our physical toe.) In modern Western fashion
practices, ownership or possession of a material thing has been replaced (in large part) by possession of
information regarding the appropriate meaning of the thing, or which among the many things would prove most
socially advantageous as a sign, I.e., that taste, explored by Bourdieu, which might convey the appropriate social
information. Likewise, in the exchange of commodities futures, it is not the thing which is traded, but rather the
possible future possession of a thing based on sets of data (and the more precise the data the better). In bothcases, the place of the thing is taken by information about the thing, and yet, according to Appadurai, the
commodity persists.
Does Appadurai suggest that, by virtue of their being commodities, the grain future and the fashion sense are
thereby thingified? If so, it would seem that he gains a useful definition of commodity at the expense of a
meaningful definition of thing.What is a thing that is a nonmaterial thing? And what use is there in talking about
things if the category might include such nonmaterial entities as financial algorithms and high-cultural aesthetic?
At times, Appadurai seems to acknowledge the distinction. In his initial comparison of sumptuary law with
fashion, he states:
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In such restricted systems of commodity flow, where valuables play the role of coupons or licenses
designed to protect status systems, we see the functional equivalent but the technical inversion of
fashion in more complex societies. Where in the one case status systems are protected and
reproduced by restricting equivalences and exchange in a stable universe of commodities, in a
fashion system what is restricted and controlled is tastein an ever-changinguniverse of
commodities, with the illusion of complete interchangeability and unrestricted access. (25)
And later in the essay:
Modern consumers are the victims of the velocity of fashion as surely as primitive consumers are
the victims of the stability of sumptuary law. (32)
But he does not seem to notice, or he has no interest in, the very real difference that this technical inversion has
with regard to the thingsat play in each example. What Appadurais slip suggests to me is the all too easy
assumption that words are things too. That a culture somehow does not change when it moves from an economy
of goods to an economy of discourse. Of course, the goods have not disappeared. Indeed, it seems all too likely
that their proliferation may lie near the heart of the very historical rift that Appadurai attempts to bridge.
But a Cultural biography of things, as Kopytoff suggests, does seem a promising methodology. What is missingfrom Appadurais analysis, and largely also from Kopytoffs, is any extended consideration of that biography
outside of the context of exchange. We shop a lot, that is certain, but a huge number of the things we buy we buy
spend a rather brief period as a commodity before being consigned tosomething else. Look around the room and
categorize the things you see according to their length of life. How many of them are, by Appadurais definition,
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currently in a commodity phase? How many of them are, at this very moment, acting socially as fashions or
stock futures? What are the rest of them doing?
It seems that Appadurai has missed an opportunity, or perhaps simply mistitled his book. He seems to be
interested in the social construction of value through exchange of commodities, and not really things at all. Things
are another matter altogether; in his analysis of modern capitalist societies, they operate as a rather misleading
metaphor. We mustnt assume (indeed, we must argue against the notion) that things have a social life only or
even primarily at their moments of highest commodity potential. The best hidden, least understood, and perhaps
most interesting aspects of the social life of things are those many days and hours that they spend outside the
realm of commoditization. What do they do while they are out of the spotlight? The things on my shelves are the
things that have been interesting me lately, and all the things in my cabinets (and my cabinets themselves). Most
of these things spent a rather brief time as commodities before entering indefinite non-commodityhood in myoffice and living room and kitchen. What do we call these things, and how do we discuss their continuing social
lives?
And this sort of thing does matter.
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About noahbrewer
I am a first year MA in the graduate program in English at the University of Georgia. My broad academic interests include new
media, critical theory (especially the work of Benjamin), and postmodern and posthuman studies.
View all posts by noahbrewer
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