I see two ways of
interpreting the situation of non-tenure-track faculty, drawing from Marx in Capital. If we think of higher education
as an industry, and a university as a capitalist enterprise on the factory
model (obviously, omitting layers of exchange between the “non-profit” sector
of higher ed and overall social capital and accumulation), then tenure-track
faculty are regular faculty workers and non-tenure-track faculty can be
understood either as cottage industry “piece work” laborers, or as an
industrial reserve army. These are not mutually exclusive, I believe.
Cottage industry, as Marx
used the term, refers to production taking place outside of the factory. Marx
distinguished ordinary cottage industry in which the commodity products of
factories are transformed into more finished commodities by individuals with
specialized abilities or at the convenience of the industrial capitalist, from
cottage industry taking place as after-hours piecework by ordinary
wage-laborers. Either form of cottage industry applies to non-tenure-track
labor.
As routine, non-tenure-track
faculty are often relied upon as labor for specific functions outside normal
production of the university. At Cow State Santa Claus, many work as “special consultants”
on special projects, to score qualification exams of various kinds, etc. Tenure-track
faculty also avail themselves of these “opportunities,” including working in
summer sessions through the for-profit extended education unit. Because faculty
wages are held below what affords many faculty a reasonable income for their
various debts, the university creates the need for additional wages for
subsistence. This is similar to mandatory overtime, or extension of work-time.
But many non-tenure-track
faculty do cottage labor of a different sort, producing themselves as means of
production, by preparing courses that they may or may not teach, doing research
and other work without compensation or paid expenses to maintain field
currency, contributing to their field’s base of knowledge, etc. Unlike
tenure-track faculty who are at least nominally paid for this work, and who can
typically predict what classes they need to prepare to teach and thus what
areas they need to be current in, non-tenure-track faculty simply have to be
ready, or else their labor will lose its saleable value. This is specialized
work performed entirely outside the factory setting, and only paid on the basis
of its sale as ready labor-power.
That is also the
condition of the industrial reserve army. To maintain low wages, it is
necessary that there always be a large stock of ready labor-power that is
unemployed or underemployed. The value of labor as a commodity is lowered by
this reserve stock. The costs for developing and maintaining that labor-power
are unpaid, or paid via charity or social welfare systems. Capitalists call upon
this reserve at the moment it is needed, and dispose of it as soon as possible.
As a reserve, workers in this class are themselves immobile, but to the
capitalist, transferrable and exchangeable at whatever distance and to whatever
locale. The workers experience their relation to the means of production as
interrupted and fleeting; for the capitalist, this labor-power is always
available.
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