Creative Industries, Value Theory and Michael Heinrich’s New Reading of Marx

This article utilises the new reading of Marx found in the work of Michael Heinrich to analyse the creative industries. It considers the role played in the production of value by the labour that takes place in the sphere of circulation. The specific focus is on creative industries such as graphic de...

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Main Author: Frederick H. Pitts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: tripleC 2015-06-01
Series:tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/639
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spelling doaj-1811a10de5b246a48423f8d2bfc2c0842020-11-24T21:41:05ZengtripleCtripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique1726-670X1726-670X2015-06-01131192–222192–22210.31269/triplec.v13i1.639639Creative Industries, Value Theory and Michael Heinrich’s New Reading of MarxFrederick H. Pitts0Department of Social and Policy Sciences, University of Bath, UKThis article utilises the new reading of Marx found in the work of Michael Heinrich to analyse the creative industries. It considers the role played in the production of value by the labour that takes place in the sphere of circulation. The specific focus is on creative industries such as graphic design, advertising and branding. It applies Heinrich's conceptualisation of 'social validation' to these sectors. This suggests that valorisation depends upon goods and services attaining commodity status by selling for money. Value is subject to this validation. The capitalist use of advertising, graphic design and branding guarantees the possibility of this validation. Using Heinrich, it reevaluates claims made about the creative industries and cognate fields in three main respects. First, it exposes as inadequate certain Marxist understandings of productive and unproductive labour and the place of circulation activities within this distinction. Second, it refutes autonomist Marxist claims as to the immeasurability of immaterial labour and the redundancy of the law of value. Third, it suggests that creative industries possess a significant role in a capitalist economy blighted by a necessity towards the overproduction of commodities.https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/639Marxvaluetheory of valuelaw of valueproductive and unproductive labourcultural and creative industriescreative labouradvertisingdesignbranding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Frederick H. Pitts
spellingShingle Frederick H. Pitts
Creative Industries, Value Theory and Michael Heinrich’s New Reading of Marx
tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique
Marx
value
theory of value
law of value
productive and unproductive labour
cultural and creative industries
creative labour
advertising
design
branding
author_facet Frederick H. Pitts
author_sort Frederick H. Pitts
title Creative Industries, Value Theory and Michael Heinrich’s New Reading of Marx
title_short Creative Industries, Value Theory and Michael Heinrich’s New Reading of Marx
title_full Creative Industries, Value Theory and Michael Heinrich’s New Reading of Marx
title_fullStr Creative Industries, Value Theory and Michael Heinrich’s New Reading of Marx
title_full_unstemmed Creative Industries, Value Theory and Michael Heinrich’s New Reading of Marx
title_sort creative industries, value theory and michael heinrich’s new reading of marx
publisher tripleC
series tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique
issn 1726-670X
1726-670X
publishDate 2015-06-01
description This article utilises the new reading of Marx found in the work of Michael Heinrich to analyse the creative industries. It considers the role played in the production of value by the labour that takes place in the sphere of circulation. The specific focus is on creative industries such as graphic design, advertising and branding. It applies Heinrich's conceptualisation of 'social validation' to these sectors. This suggests that valorisation depends upon goods and services attaining commodity status by selling for money. Value is subject to this validation. The capitalist use of advertising, graphic design and branding guarantees the possibility of this validation. Using Heinrich, it reevaluates claims made about the creative industries and cognate fields in three main respects. First, it exposes as inadequate certain Marxist understandings of productive and unproductive labour and the place of circulation activities within this distinction. Second, it refutes autonomist Marxist claims as to the immeasurability of immaterial labour and the redundancy of the law of value. Third, it suggests that creative industries possess a significant role in a capitalist economy blighted by a necessity towards the overproduction of commodities.
topic Marx
value
theory of value
law of value
productive and unproductive labour
cultural and creative industries
creative labour
advertising
design
branding
url https://www.triple-c.at/index.php/tripleC/article/view/639
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