I attended the annual convention of the National Communication Association last week in Chicago. The meeting was an opportunity for me to present two papers on the rhetoric of political economy. I wanted to give a snippet view of one of my papers, “Substitution and Atonement in Kenneth Burke’s Symbolic of Money.”
The paper is adapted from a larger work I published this summer in the KB Journal. Both try to make sense of Kenneth Burke’s treatment of money as a symbol. (Burke (1897-1993), by the way, was a major American literary/rhetorical critic influenced strongly by Aristotle, the New Testament, Marx, Freud, and William James.) The guiding question is what can be learned if we consider money in symbolic terms?
Money symbolically divides and unites us. Most obviously money divides us in terms of opportunities. The symbol of money divides societies along class lines and less obviously along racial lines. Burke notes that the words property and propriety are closely related etymologically – to be proper is to have property and be appropriate. The poor have dirty hands and dirty clothes. Nearly a billion of the world’s poorest people will never have a clean glass of water to drink their whole life through. Possessing or lacking money makes a world of difference.
But just as money can separate us, it can also bring us together. Think of all the thousands of combined dollars the Omninerds have spent on their computers in order to join this conversation. We spend billions as a society on telecommunications, books, magazines, &c., all in the name of bringing us together, sharing time together, and building a culture.
At the same time that the money symbol divides us from one another, it likewise divides us internally. For Burke, man is the symbol-using animal. Money is a powerful symbol because it caters to both our animality in the way it answers our necessity and to our symbol-usingness in the form of property. Which is another way of saying that the symbol of money can be both a means and an end. This is quite different than money qua money, which is a means sometimes confused for an end. We are just a little lower than the angels or just a little higher than the beasts, and all because of the power of speech (or, in other words, depending on how we use our symbols). The English words “peculiar,” “pecuniary,” and “fee” all have their origins in the idea of a flock or herd of farm animals. The money symbol has its origins in the domestication and possession of animals by other animals, and therefore it has a symbolic way of making us forget our own animal nature.
If we go backward in time, we find that for our remote ancestors placing an animal on an altar is akin to burning money. Money ultimately endangers religion. Because it is the lowest common denominator for motives it ultimately and symbolically challenges God, the highest common denominator for motives. Burke sees, then, the drive for financial self-improvement in terms of a limitation. Bettering our condition inevitably implicates us in a host of new ways that inevitably worsen our condition. A symbolic of motives allows us to see the oxymorons, ironies, and contradictions of our drive toward improvement. Betterment includes houses, clothes, and food, but it also must include our attitudes and the quality of our words.
The symbol of money is extraordinary because of its power to be converted into anything we choose. In fact, everything! Or so we imagine. The trust money manufactures must be universally valid – in the sense that money can answer any necessity and any preoccupation that enters the mind of the symbol-using animal. The universal validity of money is an idol with respect to eternity, but insofar as our needs are “purely temporal” (how’s that for oxymoron?), money often answers the call. Money’s power as substitution, however, is how we get to redemption by sacrifice. Atonement by sacrifice is a substitute that Burke implies has its origins in money. For the devout theologian believing in divine revelation the idea that Atonement derives from money is blasphemous. More likely, from the orthodox perspective, money is a corruption of the signs and tokens of substitution by sacrifice rather than the other way around. In the way of the sacrificial lamb, if we treat money symbolically as an end in itself it becomes a way of transcending our animal nature, but only if such transcendence is possible through human needs.
In closing, I give you the words of the Italian Medievalist and novelist Umberto Eco:
Money is an instrument. It is not a value – but we need values as well as instruments, ends as well as means. The great problem faced by human beings is finding a way to accept the fact that each of us will die.
Money can do a lot of things – but it cannot help reconcile you to your own death. It can sometimes help you postpone your own death: a man who can spend a million dollars on personal physicians will usually live longer than someone who cannot. But he can’t make himself live much longer than the average life-span of affluent people in the developed world.
And if you believe in money alone, then sooner or later, you discover money’s great limitation: it is unable to justify the fact that you are a mortal animal. Indeed, the more you try to escape that fact, the more you are forced to realize that your possessions can’t make sense of your death.
Similarly tagged OmniNerd content:
- Priorities for Life, by Occams 11 months ago
- Cash Draws Out the Greed in Everyone, by VnutZ over 1 year ago
- Eleven perspectives on P2P lending, by tomtolman almost 2 years ago
- P2P Lending - Best of the blogs, by tomtolman almost 2 years ago



an academic
article
by
Print Friendly
Write an Article
Academic Wank by Occams :: NR8 :: Show
Thanks David, I enjoyed that.
However, although I don’t disagree with any of what you have said, I can’t help feeling that it is an academic wank. By that I mean that your learned colleagues manage to read much more into this thing than is really there.
Nevertheless, this line of thought might still be worthwhile if it helps us to understand how money affects our lives and the things we should avoid in using it. I doubt that you have done this yet because it seems to boil down to the old saws that “money cannot buy happiness”, and “you can’t take it with you”. Every kid understands that.
Money is merely a convenient tool for trading. The alternative of bartering has so many limitations that the modern world could not function that way.
The fascinating implications of money, morality and mortality that you discuss are merely an outcome of the trading system and human nature. Even the divisions that money creates in our society are an outcome of the trading system and money is not the real cause. That is avarice or competition, money is only the indicator.
Yep. Wanking, all right. by scottb :: NR7 :: Show
I have to agree with Occams, here. This is continental philosophy at its silliest.
The money symbol has its origins in the domestication and possession of animals by other animals, and therefore it has a symbolic way of making us forget our own animal nature.
WTF? Seriously? How does one follow from the other?
May as well say that “masturbation” has its origin in the opposable thumb, and therefore it has a “symbolic way” of distinguishing us from our chimpanzee cousins. (Yes, I know chimpanzees have opposable thumbs.)
This isn’t philosophy, it’s a kind of gematria. It’s essentially a kind of word association game, but instead of thinking that the association reveals something about the philosopher’s subconscious, he thinks it somehow necessarily true about the real world.
If we go backward in time, we find that for our remote ancestors placing an animal on an altar is akin to burning money.
Which reveals that money as atonement is not “blasphemous”, as you later declare. The whole point of the sacrifice as a means of atonement is that the penitent must lose something of value—presumably of value comparable to the transgression. Whether that means sacrificing a goat (and subsequently buying a replacement goat) or sacrificing the monetary value of a goat is irrelevant.
Money ultimately endangers religion.
I’ll buy that. (Pun not actually intended, but certainly welcome.)
The amount of money one has is directly related to the degree to which one can free oneself from the hardships of primitive life—easy access to food, shelter, clean water, art, beauty, and so on. People who have that no longer need (or want) religion. That’s why religious belief has declined so rapidly in most wealthy western democracies.
So, yes—money endangers religion. But don’t say it like it’s a bad thing.
Because it is the lowest common denominator for motives it ultimately and symbolically challenges God, the highest common denominator for motives.
I’m afraid you’ve got that backwards. Being motivated by real-world values is certainly a higher motive than superstitious dread.