"That no man sit idle": Labor and the Problem of Play in More's Utopia

IF 0.1 Q4 CULTURAL STUDIES
Robert Tinkle
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Abstract

abstract:This essay notes a discrepancy between the literary form of Thomas More's Utopia (1516), characterized by sophisticated, ironic play, and the quite restrictive rubrics of mandatory labor that govern life in the book's utopian polity. The discrepancy suggests two things: one, that in the nascent decades of the historic transition to a capitalistic economy in England, it has become possible to conceive of play as a form of productivity; and two, that More has a class investment in demonstrating his own value to the post-feudal economy by defending his authorial play as productive or useful labor. In spite of its communistic rejection of private property and searing critique of enclosure, Utopia is invested in the ambiguities of what it means to play or labor so that it can better construct the idealized, hyperproductive bodies of colonialist expansion, consonant with the New World environment that is the site of the text's political fantasy. What this affirms is that the colonialist imaginary cannot be disentangled from capitalist accumulation, owing in large part to emerging affective discourses around the body as a site of ever-present contestation between industry and idleness.
“没有人闲坐”:莫尔乌托邦中的劳动和游戏问题
摘要:本文注意到托马斯·莫尔(Thomas More)的《乌托邦》(1516)的文学形式与该书乌托邦政治中支配生活的相当严格的强制性劳动准则之间的差异,前者以复杂、讽刺的戏剧为特征。这种差异表明了两件事:一是在英格兰历史性地向资本主义经济转型的最初几十年里,人们已经可以将游戏视为一种生产力;第二,莫尔有阶级投资,通过捍卫他的作者戏剧是生产性或有用的劳动来展示他对后封建经济的价值。尽管《乌托邦》对私有财产的共产主义拒绝和对圈地的严厉批评,但它被投资于游戏或劳动的含义的模糊性中,以便更好地构建殖民主义扩张的理想化、高产体,与作为文本政治幻想所在地的新世界环境相一致。这肯定了殖民主义的想象无法与资本主义的积累脱钩,这在很大程度上是由于围绕身体出现的情感话语,身体是工业和懒惰之间不断存在的竞争场所。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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