The insolvency of bodies. Self-ownership and the historical dynamics of the relation of capital.

The insolvency of bodies. Self-ownership and the historical dynamics of the relation of capital. Human hair was already being sold long before capitalism; the sale of human milk was common in ancient Rome and this was even a source of income for many women during the Industrial Revolution. But the first example was not an exchange of commodities in the modern sense, nor in the latter was there any recognition of women as true self-owners. The sale of blood, permitted during most of the twentieth century, was perhaps one of the first generalized ways in which self-ownership left the abstract “straitjacket” of labour power and extended to a physical element of the body, albeit renewable, thus allowing for an additional or last resort income for the most vulnerable self-owners.

Body

24.02.2015 | by Bruno Lamas