Marx’s Capital Volume 1, Part 10
Cato Manor, 1960
Expropriation
In the first of the two vivid
chapters 26 and 27 on primitive accumulation (attached), Karl Marx describes
what is required to be in place before the system of surplus value can start
pumping, and reproducing itself.
As Marx says, the myths
around this origin are many, but the truth is written in blood and fire, the
ruin of the feudal system, and the destruction of the semi-feudal,
semi-bourgeois guilds in the towns of Western Europe.
These revolutions made
possible the existence of “free labourers”, which is to say people with no
means of production or subsistence, who must sell their only possession – their
labour power – in order to survive from day to day. These are the working proletariat.
According to Marx, the
capitalistic era began in the 16th century, but he does not say that capitalism
was dominant or hegemonic at that time. Many of the bourgeois institutions that
are nowadays taken as part of capitalism, such as double-entry book-keeping,
banks, stock and bond markets, insurance, contract law and global freight
navigation, were first developed under late feudalism, but especially in the
17th century, in the service of the big, bourgeois, transcontinental business
of slavery, which is very different from capitalism.
How the “free labourers”
historically came into existence is exemplified in the second of the two
chapters, where Marx takes the “classic form” of this process as being that of
England, starting from the 16th Century (i.e. 1501 to 1600). Clearly, the
creation of the proletariat was contemporary with the slave trade, while the
latter was dominant. Capitalism only began to supersede and to actively
suppress slavery after it had matured during the period 1500 to 1800, or in
other words, not until after the “industrial revolution” of the late 18th
Century, in England and in Scotland.
The process of eviction of
people from the land is popularly known in England as “the enclosures” and in
Scotland as the “Highland clearances”. To South Africans, one can say that the
book describes processes of dispossession that are familiar even up to the
present time. In the case of the Highlands of Scotland, one can also read that
game parks (called deer forests) were replacing settlements of people from two
centuries ago. The same thing is happening today in South Africa under cover of
“green ecology”, and not only with game parks, but also with golf estates and
horse-riding establishments.
With Chapter 27, it is not
necessary to understand every local term, or to remember every local event.
What is applicable still is the class struggle that underlay it all, the
victorious bourgeoisie that came out on top, and the great, dispossessed,
working proletariat that was left as the principal basis for capitalist
extraction of surplus labour from then onwards - but also as capitalism’s
inevitable gravedigger.
Picture:
Brutal force, as in Cato Manor, 1960, is what has enabled the expropriation of
land.
·
The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Capital
V1, C26, 27, Primitive Accumulation, Expropriation, Capital.
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