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The Commodification of Living Beings in the Fur Trade: The Intersection of Cheap Raw Materials and Cheap Labor

In: The Capitalist Commodification of Animals

Author

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  • Tamar Diana Wilson

Abstract

The eighteenth- and nineteenth-century fur trade in the United States and Canada that sent hundreds of thousands of furs to Europe and China relied on “Cheap Labor” and the abundance of “Cheap Raw Materials,” that is to say, living beings such as sea otter, land otter, beaver, and seals. Native American labor, procured by and paid through trade goods in a kind of “putting out” piece-rate system, was cheap partially because their lives were maintained/reproduced through traditional agricultural or hunting and gathering economies. The commodification of fur-bearing animals led to their sharp decline and in some cases near extinction. Cheap labor and cheap living beings interacted dynamically in unison to enable capital accumulation under mercantile capitalism. At the very end of the nineteenth century, fur farming as a petty capitalist enterprise became common in Canada and the United States, and more recently has expanded greatly in China.

Suggested Citation

  • Tamar Diana Wilson, 2020. "The Commodification of Living Beings in the Fur Trade: The Intersection of Cheap Raw Materials and Cheap Labor," Research in Political Economy, in: The Capitalist Commodification of Animals, volume 35, pages 125-136, Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
  • Handle: RePEc:eme:rpeczz:s0161-723020200000035006
    DOI: 10.1108/S0161-723020200000035006
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