162sexton
We can agree that under the capitalist system one must sell their labor power and that it will be commodified as labor, which is to say it will be converted into a factor of production. We can agree that under the capitalist system the surplus value of social labor—
not the bourgeois notion of individual work—is appropriated by the owners of the means of production and converted into profit. That is the basic structure of labor exploitation under capital.
13
We must object, however, that labor exploitation is a commodification of ones own
person’ or that the capitalist system
ultimately commodifies most people’. If this were true, then slavery as the conversion of person into property would simply bean extreme form of labor exploitation.
14
Or, vice versa, exploitation would bean attenuated form of slavery. In either case, there would be only a difference of degree rather than kind between exploitation and slavery.
At any rate, disabusing ourselves of anti- black racism would, for Smith, enable us to see that they inhabit the same logic and that black struggles against racial slavery are
ultimately struggles against capitalism.
Something similar happens with respect to Smith’s statement of the relation between racial slavery and settler colonialism.
When she returns, in a more recent article on voting rights and native disappearance, to reprise her concept of racial slavery, she has this to say about the ideological formation of anti-black racism and its effects on critical intellectual production:
Because Africa is the property of Europe, Africa must then appear as always, already colonized. [...] The colonization of Africa must disappear so that Africa can appear as ontologically colonized. Only through this disavowed colonization can Black peoples be ontologically relegated to the status of property. I am gesturing, of course, to ideas outlined in Karl Marx’s 1847 lectures to the German Workingmen’s
Club of Brussels, later serialized as
Share with your friends: