Marx’s Capital Volume 1, Part 7a
Division of Labour
Karl Marx
makes use of the original distinction between Manufacture, meaning the organised co-operation of many workers in
a single workshop, and Industrial
Production, which is the same, but with powered machinery. In modern usage,
this distinction is not always clear. So, Marx Chapter 14 (downloadable below) thus:
“That co-operation which is based on division
of labour, assumes its typical form in manufacture, and is the prevalent
characteristic form of the capitalist process of production throughout the
manufacturing period properly so called. That period, roughly speaking, extends
from the middle of the 16th to the last third of the 18th century.”
The rest of
Section 1 of this chapter is a description of division of labour under the
early form of capitalism: Manufacture.
Then, in
Section 2, Marx describes the effect on an individual or “detail labourer”, and
on production, as a consequence of division of labour.
In Section
3, Marx looks at the gain that is made when serial production can be achieved,
as opposed to batch or individual piece production.
“The different detail processes, which were
successive in time, have become simultaneous, go on side by side in space.
Hence, production of a greater quantum of finished commodities in a given time.
[11] This simultaneity, it is true, is due to the general co-operative form of
the process as a whole; but Manufacture not only finds the conditions for
co-operation ready to hand, it also, to some extent, creates them by the
sub-division of handicraft labour. On the other hand, it accomplishes this
social organisation of the labour-process only by riveting each labourer to a
single fractional detail.”
In Section
4, Marx compares division of labour in a factory, with division of labour in
society.
Section 5
is a readable essay on division of labour as treated by the bourgeois Political
Economists, including Adam Smith.
In short,
this is another chapter of “Capital” that you can conquer without difficulty.
Image: Walter Crane was a 19th-century
artist who illustrated many socialist pamphlets. This work was done for May
Day, the Workers’ Day, in 1895.
- The above is to
introduce the original reading-text: Capital V1,
C14, Division of Labour and Manufacture.
- To download any of the CU courses in PDF files please click here.
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