75 pages 2 hours read

Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing

The Mushroom at the End of the World

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 2015

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Part 2, Chapters 4-7Chapter Summaries & Analyses

Part 2: “After Progress: Salvage Accumulation”

Part 2, Chapters 4-7 Summary and Analysis

This section covers Chapters 4-7: “Working the Edge,” “Open Ticket, Oregon,” “War Stories,” and “What Happened to the State? Two Kinds of Asian Americans,” as well as Interlude 2.1, “Freedom.” 

Tsing acknowledges that her focus on “ephemeral assemblages and multidirectional histories” is a departure from other work on capitalism. The focus on factories and raw materials, partly driven by Marx’s preoccupation with this form of industrialization, led to an emphasis on a “coherent governance structure” (61). To explain how her approach differs, Tsing first defines a supply chain—“one in which lead firms direct commodity traffic” (62). Commodities generally refer to goods for sale, or, for Marxists, goods which result from the labor of workers, who sold their time and bodies to earn wages. Tsing argues that capitalism, rather than being homogenizing and predictable, relies on “translation”—bringing disparate landscapes and their cultural mores together at sites of exchange, as happens when mushrooms picked in Oregon are ultimately sold in Japan (62).

Tsing notes that part of her analysis is driven by a desire to challenge the idea that capitalism has always relied only on things its own processes generate. Instead, she suggests that factories also rely on “salvage accumulation,” the use of materials that existed before capitalism and cannot be directed by it, including landscapes and human labor (63).

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