Value: what is it? What institutions enable and protect it? What kinds of social power course through it? Is there any human life to be lived outside its fiercely guarded, violently contested precincts? John Frow, Australia’s most eminent scholar of value, has spent most of his life pondering such questions. In a string of brilliantly researched publications dating back forty years, Frow has undertaken one of the most thoroughgoing forays into the theory of value (in its broadest sense) in the Anglophone world; and in his most recent publication, succinctly entitled On Value and Valuation, he brings this long journey to a conclusion of sorts. It ought to be very widely read.
For the most part, Frow has engaged value as a general anthropological tendency towards prizing certain phenomena as worthy of esteem, while others are dismissed as negligible or disposable. Value is what he calls at the start of this new book a declaration of ‘intrinsic worth or desirability or importance, corresponding to no external measure’. In this sense, value can adhere to an immense spectrum of phenomena: clean air, potable water, a particular pronunciation of a consonant, a rare trading card, a wide and varied friendship group, access to a club, a well-toned instrument, a healthy gut biome, a national anthem, the appearance of Halley’s comet, a non-fungible digital token, and so on. Anything that activates and sustains the investment of human attention, with some kind of existential reward, might be said to have value.
What then tends to happen, in any organised social formation, is that such values become regulated and subject to various kinds of restriction. Value is thus institutionalised, stamped by the impress of gatekeepers, initiates, experts, and so on, whose monopolisation of access to social values accrues to them power and influence. As Frow wrote in his first book, Marxism and Literary History (1986), it’s a process that pertains to literature, ‘the concept of [which] designates not the given totality of all writings but rather a privileged order of values, defined and realized within various institutional discourses’. Over and against the material profusion of printed texts, there arises this semi-autonomous ‘order of values’ sustained by experts, which restricts the promiscuous flows of literary signification and reward within certain well-defined channels. Value thus becomes a political and contested social dynamic, reaping more in the way of social acquiescence than sheer force, but stimulating, with its engineered scarcities, ever-renewed modes of resistance.
Yet, coming as something of a shock to this finely calibrated, complex ethnological sense of value, there is the dominant meaning of value as an economic fact. In economics, value is just that mysterious ‘something’ that allows unlike things to be traded at market as though they were secretly alike, as if it were a substance they shared, a kind of identity amidst the most radical difference. My woollen coat and your case of champagne have nothing actual in common, no shared material property, and yet we exchange them legally according to contracts that declare them equivalent. Sometimes, too, value is what attaches to things such that I get more out of their sale at market than I spend on their production: value, or here surplus value, is the goose’s golden egg on which our whole way of life – capitalism – is founded.
But when did we start speaking of value in each of these two senses? A borrowing from Old French – where it meant ‘material worth, price’ (c.1180) and ‘fair equivalent’ (c.1210) before being stretched to accommodate the senses of reputation and personal merit in the mid-thirteenth century – ‘value’ in Anglo-Norman Middle English followed the same course. Its oldest, early fourteenth-century, sense is economic: ‘The material or monetary worth of something; the amount at which something may be estimated in terms of a medium of exchange, as money or goods, or some other similar standard.’ Only a century later does an apparently derived, subsidiary, metaphorical meaning begin to develop: ‘The relative worth, usefulness, or importance of a thing or (occasionally) a person; the estimation in which a thing is held according to its real or supposed desirability or utility.’ It is much the same history as that of the term ‘worth’ (from the Middle Low German: wert).
European languages show the priority of ‘value’ as a measure of the abstract exchangeability of goods and money; and a subsequent semantic derivation to indicate more impalpable kinds of prizing. The problem then always arises, as Shakespeare’s Timon bitterly observes, of the fateful reversal of this derivation back to its metallic source: