We could, for example, use CPI inflation as a time series reflecting what the bourgeoisie wish to pay the average
social labourer and then do time series to work out the number of units of
social labourer are consumed per rich person's wealth.
However, the issue with using Marx for this is that Marx discovered empirically that not all labour hours are treated the same, and that the level of capitalisation (unit productivity per labour hour), personal productivity (length of the working day, fatigue), and social utility produced an «average»
social labourer.
Not exact matches
This new
social order subjugates man into
labourers who are only concerned with producing and consuming goods and generating corporeal pleasure.
Recent projects include GUESTS, a series of works in response to research and interviews with migrant
labourers in Berlin (shown at: Where Everything is Yet To Happen, ex-factory in Bosnia - Herzegovina, Over the Counter: the Phenomenon of Post-socialist Economy in Contemporary Art at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Budapest Journeys With No Return at Kurt - Kurt Gallery Berlin, all 2010); Clothes for Living & Dying, a major body of work and an international solo exhibition tour to Croatia, Germany and the UK (2005 — 2008); and Artist - in - Residence project at the University of Bath
Social & Policy Sciences department, and the Institute for Contemporary Interdisciplinary Art (2010).
«The Montmartre as an Area for Outsiders and
Social Change» introduces the visitor to the inhabitants of the district, its
labourers, beggars, clochards, and washerwomen, but also to the people who participated in demonstrations in these politically and socially agitating days.