Among the many
interesting connections for me at Geeta’s 50th Stanford Reunion
last weekend was the "aha" moment I had during a lecture by the
Stanford historian Priya Satia on “Samuel Galton, Quaker Gunmaker.”
In 1795, Birmingham Meeting admonished Galton and his family for
being gunmakers, after a quietist century of tolerating them. Galton
was a central figure in the meeting, and a member of the Birmingham
Enlightenment. He published a broadside in response, pointing to the
naivete and hypocrisy of his Quaker peers in criticizing him for
taking part in an activity in which all of them were complicit. He
refused to be excommunicated, and continued to sit at his accustomed
bench, coming early to Meeting and greeting his peers. He continued
to give large donations to Birmingham Meeting, and they were
accepted.
Satia’s analysis
of the process of gunmaking in industrial Birmingham clarified anew
for me the insidious nature of industrial capitalism. Galton’s
foundry made several metal parts for the guns, as well as toys and
sewing tool parts, nails, etc. But craftsmen made the gunstocks and
others assembled the guns. The Quakers, like everyone else in
England, were swept up in the “civilizing” effect of guns, which
were not all that effective and mostly just brandished until they
became more efficient late in the eighteenth century. Highwaymen,
who would formerly cut one’s throat, were seen as “gentlemen”
when they merely accosted travelers at gunpoint. Guns were just one
manifestation of the bristling, burgeoning industrial revolution, and
the many wars of the century were generally experienced as part of
British national civilizing effort. Everything changed with the the
Napoleonic Wars, and it became quickly clear aftter the British
became involved in 1795 that guns were actually being aimed at living
beings with the purpose of killing them, rather than ritualistic
orderly firings in the general direction of the enemy. Murderous
intent with more advanced weaponry made Birmingham Friends wake up to
the truly non-pacifist nature of the tool.
What I realized from
the historian’s careful analysis of the process of gunmaking over
the eighteenth century was that the alienation of labor, as Marx put
it, and its division into many different parts both removed the
satisfaction of crafting one’s work s well as subtly displacing
moral responsibility for one’s productions. This was true both for
producer and consumer. We have inherited a hyper-evolved version of
the early industrial model, with more and more steps and players,
with both the sourcing of materials and the making of finished
products now a worldwide web of material interactions. The process of
making running shoes comes to mind, with a dizzying number of
players all over the planet making a single shoe.
Galton, an
intelligent and experienced factory owner, understood this process,
while his fellow Quakers did not, making it much easier for them to
blame Galton for his part in a process which the government had
deliberately broken into many different components so this key
industry could not be sabotaged by enemies. Even after 225 years, we
still look at the tools of war as if they were separate from the rest of the industrial process, through which humankind is making war on
the Earth (and using trade to periodically make war on others). We
oversimplify, because we want to feel good, washing our hands of
evildoing. But these evils are a multitude thoroughly intertwined
with our entanglement with the capitalist machine.
At the end of the
lecture, Geeta stood up to reaffirm Satia’s point about the
complicity of all members of society in the creation of a nationalist
citizenry entrained within the nascent industrial complex. She quoted John Woolman’s prescient words, “Let us look upon
our treasure, the furniture of our houses, and our garments, and try to discover,
whether the seeds of war are nourished by these our possessions.”
The host for the lecture said to me afterwards that Geeta had
perfectly summed up the lecturer’s point.
Woolman was a moral
genius, seeing the implications of every separate action and pattern
of economic behavior, and addressing those involved: Quaker slavers,
Quaker owners of whaling vessels (Woolman calculated the rate of kill
and said that it would not be too many decades before the whale
population would be endangered), wearers of died clothing, users of
whale oil. The list goes on and on. But Woolman’s life was only a
small degree as embedded in the industrial complex as our own. To
have the same degree of moral perspicuity as he would require us to
be saints, if not avatars of moral insight, which would lead to
lives very difficult to construct without a large local workforce (a
large family, a good sized plot of land, and probably some animals,
even if we had vegan inclinations).
Labels: alienation of labor, industrial revolution, John Woolman, pacifism, Priya Satia, Quaker gunmaker, samuel galton, slavery, whaling
# posted by Robert McGahey @ 10:45 PM