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Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.20901/pm.61.4.05

First as adornment, then as money: Neo-Rousseauian theater of exchange in The Dawn of Everything

Darko Vinketa orcid id orcid.org/0009-0007-9283-5476 ; Johns Hopkins University, Department of Political Science *

* Corresponding author.


Full text: english pdf 288 Kb

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Abstract

To what extent do contemporary critical theories of money operate under the shadow of Rousseau’s sentimentalist horizon of natural equality corrupted by the advent of civilization? This article outlines a Derridean reading of Graeber’s and Wengrow’s recent anthropological study of prehistoric social formations in an effort to demonstrate the unacknowledged influence which Rousseau’s disdain for theatricality holds over many present-day assumptions about the social logic of money. In an attempt to repudiate the orthodox theory of money as a medium of exchange, these anthropologists equate the origin of money with a predilection for adornments and self-display. As soon as money becomes a problem of representation, however, the critical discourse immediately shifts towards an anti-theatrical lamentation for lost authenticity which necessarily rehearses the circular logic of Rousseau’s thought. Money ultimately becomes indistinguishable from sociality as such.

Keywords

Theories of Money; Theatricality; Jean-Jacques Rousseau; David Graeber; Metaphysics of Presence; State of Nature

Hrčak ID:

328126

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/328126

Publication date:

19.2.2025.

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