Update content/shard/abundance.md

This commit is contained in:
Tomislav Medak 2024-05-19 09:59:05 -07:00
parent 877a8714cc
commit c68835b06e

View file

@ -6,9 +6,9 @@ glassblowers = ["olgagoriunova.md"]
There are many bad, or at least non-productive ways, to think about abundance. One is the digital abundance understood as the mere volume of things that can be made available as the material cost of the carrier (a file versus a book, tape or canvas) is reduced. This was the 1990s copyleft argument focusing on the elimination of degradation in quality associated with copying, and ease of distribution and storage.
Now, digital abundance is a menace. There is too much stuff and the digital overload is intolerable. There is also too much stuff in general in the Western world and its quality is mostly poor. We usually hear this argument in relation to fast fashion, fast food and social media content. Such abundance relies on permanent consumption and ends up polluting peoples brains, bodies, communities, beaches and forests, with whole countries designated as the rich worlds rubbish dumps. From this point of view, a call for scarcity makes sense. Slow food, fewer material items, appraisal of relations in lieu of commodification reposition abundance and its relationship to scarcity. Here, the ecological cost of abundance is the planet.
Now, digital abundance is a menace. There is too much stuff and the digital overload is intolerable. There is also too much stuff in general in the Western world and its quality is mostly poor. We usually hear this argument in relation to fast fashion, fast food and social media content. Such abundance relies on permanent consumption and ends up polluting people's brains, bodies, communities, beaches and forests, with whole countries designated as the rich worlds rubbish dumps. From this point of view, a call for scarcity makes sense. Slow food, fewer material items, appraisal of relations in lieu of commodification reposition abundance and its relationship to scarcity. Here, the ecological cost of abundance is the planet.
Amongst projects attempting to address climate collapse then ![Ann Pettifors *The Case for the Green New Deal*](bib:fa8bd539-edaf-40ed-99cd-3fa86e7a6e25) conjures an aesthetic of material scarcity as an urgent necessity. Classically, from Marx, scarcity is a “natural” condition, and now we must return to it, to combat commodification of people and relations and the destruction of the world. Abundance then is to be found in de-objectification, dealienation, conviviality, non-work and leisure, care, etc. These are older ideas, connected to the promise that when people are freed from the necessity of hard work (function of scarcity), they will be free to create (art), which is what brings meaning (Gods replacement) and pleasure (engaging desire). However, generally speaking, the proposition of scarcity fails to intervene in the orchestrations of desire. It is hard to desire scarcity. Instead, what is needed is a reconceptualisation of abundance (alongside the narratives of any “natural condition” for humanity). This is also necessary to address existing practices of abundance that counter our current extractivist nightmares.
Amongst projects attempting to address climate collapse then ![Ann Pettifor's *The Case for the Green New Deal*](bib:fa8bd539-edaf-40ed-99cd-3fa86e7a6e25) conjures an aesthetic of material scarcity as an urgent necessity. Classically, from Marx, scarcity is a “natural” condition, and now we must return to it, to combat commodification of people and relations and the destruction of the world. Abundance then is to be found in de-objectification, dealienation, conviviality, non-work and leisure, care, etc. These are older ideas, connected to the promise that when people are freed from the necessity of hard work (function of scarcity), they will be free to create (art), which is what brings meaning (God's replacement) and pleasure (engaging desire). However, generally speaking, the proposition of scarcity fails to intervene in the orchestrations of desire. It is hard to desire scarcity. Instead, what is needed is a reconceptualisation of abundance (alongside the narratives of any “natural condition” for humanity). This is also necessary to address existing practices of abundance that counter our current extractivist nightmares.
So, how to think of it otherwise?
@ -26,6 +26,6 @@ It follows then that abundance actually exists but it is scarcity that is produc
Quotes from ![](bib:5aa403d5-c826-4b6c-b084-3961bbddee23):
“To view the word post-scarcity simply as meaning as large quantity of socially available goods would be as absurd as to regard a living organism simply as a lager quantity of chemicals.” “…scarcity is more than a condition of scarce resources: the word, if it is to mean anything in human terms, must encompass social relations and cultural apparatus that foster insecurity in the psyche… this insecurity is a function of repressive limits established by an exploitative class structure. Pp.12-13
"To view the word 'post-scarcity' simply as meaning as large quantity of socially available goods would be as absurd as to regard a living organism simply as a lager quantity of chemicalsscarcity is more than a condition of scarce resources: the word, if it is to mean anything in human terms, must encompass social relations and cultural apparatus that foster insecurity in the psyche … this insecurity is a function of repressive limits established by an exploitative class structure". Pp.12-13
“[T]he word post-scarcity means fundamentally more than a mere abundance of the means of life: it decidedly includes the *kind* of life this means support ... today, scarcity has to be enforced, p.59
"[T]he word 'post-scarcity' means fundamentally more than a mere abundance of the means of life: it decidedly includes the *kind* of life this means support ... today, scarcity has to be enforced", p.59