Best Seller
Paperback
$16.00
Published on Apr 13, 2018 | 72 Pages
Why has there been so much interest in “surplus value” in recent years? In “The Outside Can’t Go Outside”, artist Merlin Carpenter considers how this term has been inserted into contemporary art theory following the financial crisis of 2007/8. The book focuses on the idea that the value of art is located in unpaid mental, educational, and communicational labor that is gradually accrued and then exploited according to the logic of Marx’s central thesis on exploitation. This much-hyped view is rejected in favor of a more rigorous Marxist interpretation of the nature of surplus value, and its role in a systematic law of value.
Carpenter counterposes value to what exists outside of it—a dream, an imaginary, what he describes as a “trance” or the location of revolutionary thought and desires. The outside, however, is not proposed as a physical location, but as an outside inside the body that functions as a line of control within. Moreover, the author suggests that the new revolutionary subjects might be the new groups that form in order to push against control networks, in a reordering of class struggles.
Institut für Kunstkritik Series
You May Also Like
Analogue Africa
Hardcover
$26.95
Ready to Paint Postcards: Mountains
Trade Paperback
$17.95
The Society of the Screen
Trade Paperback Original
$32.95
Disney Mystery Coloring: The Classics
Trade Paperback Original
$22.00
200 Cute Things to Draw
Trade Paperback
$19.95
Wild Folk [North American Edition]
Hardcover
$35.00
Everybody’s Fly
Hardcover
$32.00
NYC Street Vendors
Hardcover
$35.00
Egon Schiele
Hardcover
$40.00
×