This
is a paper I have prepared for the London Historical Materialism 22nd
Annual Conference, SOAS, 6–9 November 2025.
You can now view this paper at Academia:
Abstract
This
paper complements the presentation I gave at HM London Conference 2024 where
the focus was on labour-power and its social re/production. Labour-power is the
unique commodity, the ‘class of one’; the only commodity that has the capacity
to generate more value – surplus-value – than what it takes to reproduce itself
when it is transformed into labour in capitalist labour processes. For this
2025 presentation, the focus is on the general class of commodities; that is,
all commodities excluding labour-power. In particular, educational
commodification and value production in educational institutions are explored.
Can education be a commodity? Is education productive of value? If education is
a commodity why does it matter? These perennial questions regarding educational
commodification, questions that bedevil mainstream sociology and liberal
thought as much as Marxist educational theory, are at the centre of this
presentation. The first section of the paper lays the ground by drawing from
Marx’s ideas on the commodity and value production. It also presents some of
the hand-wringing statements and nebulous arguments regarding whether education
can be a commodity, or not. Section two visits Marx’s metaphor of education as
a ‘sausage factory’ in Capital. It
indicates how, under certain conditions, what goes on in educational
institutions results in commodity and value-production. The third section
focuses on ‘Marx’s road’; his discussion on the roles of State, Money and
‘capital as capital’ in the production of value in Notebook V from the Grundrisse. The conclusions from this section are then
dragged back to the ‘sausage factory’ to give a fuller account of educational
commodification and value production. The Conclusion revisits questions of
whether education is, or can be, a commodity, if it produces value, and why
such questions are important. This last point draws on the work of Mike
Neary.
Glenn Rikowski, Forest Gate, London, 27th October 2025
Academia:
http://independent.academia.edu/GlennRikowski
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