THE CONQUEST OF BREAD
      by P. Kropotkin
 
       
 
      CHAPTER XV 
 
      The Division of Labour
 
      I
    
    
      POLITICAL ECONOMY has always confined itself to
      stating facts occurring in society, and justifying
      them in the interest of the dominant class. Thus
      it is in favour of the division of labour created by
      industry. Having found it profitable to capitalists
      it has set it up as a principle.
     
    
      Look at the village smith, said Adam Smith,
      the father of modern Political Economy. If he has
      never been accustomed to making nails he will
      only succeed by hard toil in forging two to three
      hundred a day, and even then they will be bad.
      But if this same smith has never done anything
      but nails, he will easily supply as many as two
      thousand three hundred in the course of a day.
      And Smith hastened to the conclusion--"Divide
      labour, specialize, go on specializing; let us have
      smiths who only know how to make heads or points
      of nails, and by this means we shall produce more.
      We shall grow rich."
     
    
      That a smith sentenced for life to the making
      of heads of nails would lose all interest in his work,
      would be entirely at the mercy of his employer
      with his limited handicraft, would be out of work
      four months out of twelve, and that his wages would
      decrease when he could be easily replaced by an
      apprentice, Smith did not think of it when he
      exclaimed--"Long live the division of labour.
      This is the real gold-mine that will enrich the
      nation!" And all joined in the cry.
     
    
      And later on, when a Sismondi or a J. B. Say
      began to understand that the division of labour,
      instead of enriching the whole nation, only enriches
      the rich, and that the worker, who for life is doomed
      to making the eighteenth part of a pin, grows
      stupid and sinks into poverty--what did official
      economists propose? Nothing! They did not say
      to themselves that by a lifelong grind at one and
      the same mechanical toil the worker would lose
      his intelligence and his spirit of invention, and
      that, on the contrary, a variety of occupations
      would result in considerably augmenting the
      productivity of a nation. But this is the very
      issue now before us.
     
    
      If, however, only economists preached the
      permanent and often hereditary division of labour,
      we might allow them to preach it as much as they
      pleased. But ideas taught by doctors of science
      filter into men's minds and pervert them; and
      from repeatedly hearing the division of labour,
      profits, interest, credit, etc., spoken of as problems
      long since solved, men, and workers too, end by
      arguing like economists, and by venerating the
      same fetishes.
     
    
      Thus we see a number of socialists, even those
      who have not feared to point out the mistakes of
      science, justifying the division of labour. Talk
      to them about the organization of work during
      the Revolution, and they answer that the division
      of labour must be maintained; that if you
      sharpened pins before the Revolution you must go
      on sharpening them after. True, you will not have
      to work more than five hours a day, but you will
      have to sharpen pins all your life, while others will
      make designs for machines that will enable you to
      sharpen hundreds of millions of pins during your
      lifetime; and others again will be specialists in the
      higher branches of literature, science, and art, etc.
      You were born to sharpen pins while Pasteur was
      born to invent the inoculation against anthrax,
      and the Revolution will leave you both to your
      respective employments. Well, it is this horrible
      principle, so noxious to society, so brutalizing to
      the individual, source of so much harm, that we
      propose to discuss in its divers manifestations.
     
    
      We know the consequences of the division of
      labour full well. It is evident that we are divided
      into two classes: on the one hand, producers
      who consume very little and are exempt from
      thinking because they only do physical work,
      and who work badly because their brains remain
      inactive; and on the other hand, the consumers,
      who, producing little or hardly anything, have the
      privilege of thinking for the others, and who
      think badly because the whole world of those who
      toil with their hands is unknown to them. The
      labourers of the soil know nothing of machinery
      those who work at machinery ignore everything
      about agriculture. The ideal of modern industry
      is a child tending a machine that he cannot and
      must not understand, and a foreman who fines him
      if his attention flags for a moment. The ideal
      of industrial agriculture is to do away with the
      agricultural labourer altogether and to set a man
      who does odd jobs to tend a steam-plough or a
      threshing-machine.  The division of labour means
      labelling and stamping men for life--some to
      splice ropes in factories, some to be foremen in a
      business, others to shove huge coal-baskets in a
      particular part of a mine; but none of them to have
      any idea of machinery as a whole, nor of business,
      nor of mines. And thereby they destroy the love
      of work and the capacity for invention that, at the
      beginning of modern industry, created the machinery
      on which we pride ourselves so much.
     
    
      What they have done for individuals, they also
      wanted to do for nations. Humanity was to be
      divided into national workshops, having each its
      speciality. Russia, we were taught, was destined
      by nature to grow corn; England to spin cotton;
      Belgium to weave cloth; while Switzerland was
      to train nurses and governesses.  Moreover, each
      separate city was to establish a speciality. Lyons
      was to weave silk, Auvergne to make lace, and
      Paris fancy articles.  Economists believed that
      specialization opened an immense field for production
      and consumption, and that an era of limitless wealth for
      mankind was at hand.
     
    
      But these great hopes vanished as fast as technical
      knowledge spread abroad. As long as England stood
      alone as a weaver of cotton, and as a metal-worker
      on a large scale; as long as only Paris made artistic
      fancy articles, etc., all went well, economists
      could preach so-called division of labour without
      being refuted.
     
    
      But a new current of thought induced all civilized
      nations to manufacture for themselves. They
      found it advantageous to produce what they
      formerly received from other countries, or from their
      colonies, which in their turn aimed at emancipating
      themselves from the mother-country. Scientific
      discoveries universalized the methods of production
      and henceforth it was useless to pay an exorbitant
      price abroad for what could easily be produced at
      home. Does not then this industrial revolution
      strike a crushing blow at the theory of the division
      of labour which was supposed to be so sound?
     
    
    
     This text was taken from a 1st edition of The Conquest of Bread,
    G. P. Putnam's Sons, New York and London, 1906.
 
     
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