The Sower

The Sower, by Vincent Van Gogh. 1888

Sometimes, poetry is like a mys­tery, like a detec­tive story put to song. Sometimes sim­i­les and metaphors string bits of life (like notes) into a song, a sym­phony, or a col­lage of chords never heard together. The point. Yes, that’s often the point. The bridge works for visu­als as well. And for tac­tiles. The bridges work between humans, between nature, between humans and nature and beyond. Inside, out­side, ver­ti­cally, hor­i­zon­tally, depth and fore­ground, find­ing all dimen­sions, incor­po­rat­ing dis­parate ele­ments. Harmonizing. Even aton­ally. Even off key to form new strings of keys wash­ing into larger lakes, rivers, oceans of meaning.

The poet Jill Magi works some metaphor­i­cal magic on a seem­ingly unlikely topic below: Labor. To bor­row a phrase, it’s a labor of love going back in time and lead­ing to the present. Metacritical irony, in a sense, as she works in the vine­yard to find the heart of work.

 

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It has always puz­zled me that com­mu­nism and cap­i­tal­ism are gen­er­ally seen as oppo­sites. This is the wrong place and time to go into a long dis­qui­si­tion on the topic, as we are, of course, an Arts Journal. But I will say that I see Labor lost in the bat­tle between two sides which are essen­tially about power rela­tion­ships, not philo­soph­i­cal oppo­sites. In short, Labor is still owned in both sys­tems, in real­ity. In real­ity, being the key. Masters and slaves still line up pretty much in the same way, and Labor loses out in both sys­tems. We have yet to cre­ate a sys­tem where it wins. In order for that to be the case, nei­ther the cor­po­ra­tion nor the state could “enslave” the worker. The worker would be both boss and employee, con­trac­tu­ally oblig­ated not to a hier­ar­chy in the pri­vate or pub­lic sec­tor, but to herself/​himself and the per­son on the receiv­ing end of the prod­uct or ser­vice. In short, a hor­i­zon­tal, open-​​ended exchange, not a ver­ti­cal trap.

Ironically, an almost ideal and pure form of this hor­i­zon­tal exchange can some­times hap­pen in the world this jour­nal chooses to focus on. Sometimes. If, for instance, Van Gogh paints a paint­ing and sells it to a col­lec­tor, he is almost there, almost to the ideal form of work/​labor/​control of self. There are, of course, all kinds of exten­u­at­ing cir­cum­stances, com­pro­mises that may come into play, anx­i­eties unleashed, frus­tra­tions pro­voked. But if the artist can cre­ate what he or she wants to cre­ate, with­out com­pro­mise, and sells that work at a price that meets their expec­ta­tions of main­tain­ing their liveli­hood, then they come very close to achiev­ing the per­fect exchange.

Of course, in our com­plex mod­ern world, this is a very rare occa­sion for the artist/​worker. Most of the time, hier­ar­chies of scale come into play and gen­er­ally take over. The more peo­ple involved in that trans­ac­tion, the less hor­i­zon­tal it becomes, and the fur­ther away from a healthy exchange of labor/​autonomy we go. Much of this is inevitable, given the fact of 7 bil­lion peo­ple sur­round­ing us. But we have yet to cre­ate a sys­tem that even attempts to reduce the ver­ti­cal. Most of our cre­ations induce, expand and pro­tect hier­ar­chies. This seems to me to be contra-​​human and con­tin­ues to be unhealthy. We are begin­ning to see more than obvi­ous signs that our cur­rent sys­tems don’t work very well.

Time for some­thing com­pletely different.

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