Time wars: our finite lives frittered away by the neoliberal
machine<http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/time-wars-our-finite-lives-frittered-away-by-the-neoliberal-machine/2012/08/15>
[image: photo of Michel Bauwens]
Michel Bauwens
15th August 2012

*Cory Doctorow*
introduces<http://boingboing.net/2012/08/12/time-wars-our-finite-lives-fr.html>the
remarkable essay, Time-wars’
by Mark 
Fisher<http://www.gonzocircus.com/xtrpgs/incubate-special-exclusive-essay-time-wars-by-mark-fisher/>
:

The system distributes the gains of automation so unevenly that a
tragically overworked class is pitted against a tragically unemployed
class. Meanwhile, the only resource that is truly non-renewable — the time
of our lives — is frittered away in “work” that we do because we must,
because of adherence to doctrine about how money should flow.

Excerpt from *Mark Fisher*:

“For most workers, there is no such thing as the long term. As sociologist
Richard Sennett put it in his book The Corrosion of Character: The Personal
Consequences of Work in the New Capitalism, the post-Fordist worker “lives
in a world marked … by short-term flexibility and flux … Corporations break
up or join together, jobs appear and disappear, as events lacking
connection.” (30) Throughout history, humans have learned to come to terms
with the traumatic upheavals caused by war or natural disasters, but
“[w]hat’s peculiar about uncertainty today,” Sennett points out, “is that
it exists without any looming historical disaster; instead it is woven into
the everyday practices of a vigorous capitalism.”

It isn’t only work that has become more tenuous. The neoliberal attacks on
public services, welfare programmes and trade unions mean that we are
increasingly living in a world deprived of security or solidarity. The
consequence of the normalisation of uncertainty is a permanent state of
low-level panic. Fear, which attaches to particular objects, is replaced by
a more generalised anxiety, a constant twitching, an inability to settle.
The uncertainty of work is intensified by digital communication technology.
As soon as there is email, there are no longer working hours nor a
workplace. What characterises the present moment more than our anxious
checking – of our messages, which may bring opportunities or demands (often
both at the same time), or, more abstractly, of our status, which, like the
stock market is constantly under review, never finally resolved?

We are very far from the “society of leisure” that was confidently
predicted in the 1970s. Contrary to the hopes raised at that time,
technology has not liberated us from work. As Federico Campagna writes in
his article “Radical Atheism”, published on the Through Europe website. “In
the current age of machines … humans finally have the possibility of
devolving most productive processes to technological apparatus, while
retaining all outcomes for themselves. In other words, the (first) world
currently hosts all the necessary pre-conditions for the realization of the
old autonomist slogan ‘zero work / full income/ all production / to
automation’. Despite all this, 21st century Western societies are still
torn by the dusty, capitalist dichotomy which opposes a tragically
overworked section of population against an equally tragically unemployed
one.”

Campagna’s call for a “radial atheism” is based on the recognition that the
precariousness that cannot be eliminated is that of life and the body. If
there is no afterlife, then our time is finite. Curiously, however, we
subjects of late capitalism act as if there is infinite time to waste on
work. Work looms over us as never before. “In an eccentric and an extreme
society like ours,” argue Carl Cederström and Peter Fleming in their book
Dead Man Working, “working has assumed a universal presence – a ‘worker’s
society in the worst sense of the term – where even the unemployed and
children become obsessed with it.” (2) Work now colonises weekends, late
evenings, even our dreams. “Under Fordism, weekends and leisure time were
still relatively untouched,” Cederström and Fleming point out. “Today,
however, capital seeks to exploit our sociality in all spheres of work.
When we all become ‘human capital’ we not only have a job, or perform a
job. We are the job.”
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to