In what has been said of the evolution
of the vicarious leisure class and its differentiation
from the general body of the working classes, reference
has been made to a further division of labour, that
between the different servant classes. One portion
of the servant class, chiefly those persons whose
occupation is vicarious leisure, come to undertake
a new, subsidiary range of duties the vicarious
consumption of goods. The most obvious form in
which this consumption occurs is seen in the wearing
of liveries and the occupation of spacious servants’
quarters. Another, scarcely less obtrusive or
less effective form of vicarious consumption, and
a much more widely prevalent one, is the consumption
of food, clothing, dwelling, and furniture by the
lady and the rest of the domestic establishment.
But already at a point in economic
evolution far antedating the emergence of the lady,
specialised consumption of goods as an evidence of
pecuniary strength had begun to work out in a more
or less elaborate system. The beginning of a
differentiation in consumption even antedates the
appearance of anything that can fairly be called pecuniary
strength. It is traceable back to the initial
phase of predatory culture, and there is even a suggestion
that an incipient differentiation in this respect
lies back of the beginnings of the predatory life.
This most primitive differentiation in the consumption
of goods is like the later differentiation with which
we are all so intimately familiar, in that it is largely
of a ceremonial character, but unlike the latter it
does not rest on a difference in accumulated wealth.
The utility of consumption as an evidence of wealth
is to be classed as a derivative growth. It is
an adaption to a new end, by a selective process, of
a distinction previously existing and well established
in men’s habits of thought.
In the earlier phases of the predatory
culture the only economic differentiation is a broad
distinction between an honourable superior class made
up of the able-bodied men on the one side, and a base
inferior class of labouring women on the other.
According to the ideal scheme of life in force at
the time it is the office of the men to consume what
the women produce. Such consumption as falls to
the women is merely incidental to their work; it is
a means to their continued labour, and not a consumption
directed to their own comfort and fulness of life.
Unproductive consumption of goods is honourable, primarily
as a mark of prowess and a perquisite of human dignity;
secondarily it becomes substantially honourable to
itself, especially the consumption of the more desirable
things. The consumption of choice articles of
food, and frequently also of rare articles of adornment,
becomes tabu to the women and children; and if there
is a base (servile) class of men, the tabu holds also
for them. With a further advance in culture this
tabu may change into simple custom of a more or less
rigorous character; but whatever be the theoretical
basis of the distinction which is maintained, whether
it be a tabu or a larger conventionality, the features
of the conventional scheme of consumption do not change
easily. When the quasi-peaceable stage of industry
is reached, with its fundamental institution of chattel
slavery, the general principle, more or less rigorously
applied, is that the base, industrious class should
consume only what may be necessary to their subsistence.
In the nature of things, luxuries and the comforts
of life belong to the leisure class. Under the
tabu, certain victuals, and more particularly certain
beverages, are strictly reserved for the use of the
superior class.
The ceremonial differentiation of
the dietary is best seen in the use of intoxicating
beverages and narcotics. If these articles of
consumption are costly, they are felt to be noble
and honorific. Therefore the base classes, primarily
the women, practice an enforced continence with respect
to these stimulants, except in countries where they
are obtainable at a very low cost. From archaic
times down through all the length of the patriarchal
regime it has been the office of the women to prepare
and administer these luxuries, and it has been the
perquisite of the men of gentle birth and breeding
to consume them. Drunkenness and the other pathological
consequences of the free use of stimulants therefore
tend in their turn to become honorific, as being a
mark, at the second remove, of the superior status
of those who are able to afford the indulgence.
Infirmities induced by over-indulgence are among some
peoples freely recognised as manly attributes.
It has even happened that the name for certain diseased
conditions of the body arising from such an origin
has passed into everyday speech as a synonym for “noble”
or “gentle”. It is only at a relatively
early stage of culture that the symptoms of expensive
vice are conventionally accepted as marks of a superior
status, and so tend to become virtues and command the
deference of the community; but the reputability that
attaches to certain expensive vices long retains so
much of its force as to appreciably lesson the disapprobation
visited upon the men of the wealthy or noble class
for any excessive indulgence. The same invidious
distinction adds force to the current disapproval
of any indulgence of this kind on the part of women,
minors, and inferiors. This invidious traditional
distinction has not lost its force even among the more
advanced peoples of today. Where the example
set by the leisure class retains its imperative force
in the regulation of the conventionalities, it is
observable that the women still in great measure practise
the same traditional continence with regard to stimulants.
This characterisation of the greater
continence in the use of stimulants practised by the
women of the reputable classes may seem an excessive
refinement of logic at the expense of common sense.
But facts within easy reach of any one who cares to
know them go to say that the greater abstinence of
women is in some part due to an imperative conventionality;
and this conventionality is, in a general way, strongest
where the patriarchal tradition the tradition
that the woman is a chattel has retained
its hold in greatest vigour. In a sense which
has been greatly qualified in scope and rigour, but
which has by no means lost its meaning even yet, this
tradition says that the woman, being a chattel, should
consume only what is necessary to her sustenance, except
so far as her further consumption contributes to the
comfort or the good repute of her master. The
consumption of luxuries, in the true sense, is a consumption
directed to the comfort of the consumer himself, and
is, therefore, a mark of the master. Any such
consumption by others can take place only on a basis
of sufferance. In communities where the popular
habits of thought have been profoundly shaped by the
patriarchal tradition we may accordingly look for
survivals of the tabu on luxuries at least to the extent
of a conventional deprecation of their use by the
unfree and dependent class. This is more particularly
true as regards certain luxuries, the use of which
by the dependent class would detract sensibly from
the comfort or pleasure of their masters, or which
are held to be of doubtful legitimacy on other grounds.
In the apprehension of the great conservative middle
class of Western civilisation the use of these various
stimulants is obnoxious to at least one, if not both,
of these objections; and it is a fact too significant
to be passed over that it is precisely among these
middle classes of the Germanic culture, with their
strong surviving sense of the patriarchal proprieties,
that the women are to the greatest extent subject
to a qualified tabu on narcotics and alcoholic beverages.
With many qualifications with more qualifications
as the patriarchal tradition has gradually weakened the
general rule is felt to be right and binding that women
should consume only for the benefit of their masters.
The objection of course presents itself that expenditure
on women’s dress and household paraphernalia
is an obvious exception to this rule; but it will
appear in the sequel that this exception is much more
obvious than substantial. During the earlier
stages of economic development, consumption of goods
without stint, especially consumption of the better
grades of goods, ideally all consumption
in excess of the subsistence minimum, pertains
normally to the leisure class. This restriction
tends to disappear, at least formally, after the later
peaceable stage has been reached, with private ownership
of goods and an industrial system based on wage labour
or on the petty household economy. But during
the earlier quasi-peaceable stage, when so many of
the traditions through which the institution of a
leisure class has affected the economic life of later
times were taking form and consistency, this principle
has had the force of a conventional law. It has
served as the norm to which consumption has tended
to conform, and any appreciable departure from it
is to be regarded as an aberrant form, sure to be
eliminated sooner or later in the further course of
development.
The quasi-peaceable gentleman of leisure,
then, not only consumes of the staff of life beyond
the minimum required for subsistence and physical
efficiency, but his consumption also undergoes a specialisation
as regards the quality of the goods consumed.
He consumes freely and of the best, in food, drink,
narcotics, shelter, services, ornaments, apparel,
weapons and accoutrements, amusements, amulets, and
idols or divinities. In the process of gradual
amelioration which takes place in the articles of
his consumption, the motive principle and proximate
aim of innovation is no doubt the higher efficiency
of the improved and more elaborate products for personal
comfort and well-being. But that does not remain
the sole purpose of their consumption. The canon
of reputability is at hand and seizes upon such innovations
as are, according to its standard, fit to survive.
Since the consumption of these more excellent goods
is an evidence of wealth, it becomes honorific; and
conversely, the failure to consume in due quantity
and quality becomes a mark of inferiority and demerit.
This growth of punctilious discrimination
as to qualitative excellence in eating, drinking,
etc. presently affects not only the manner of
life, but also the training and intellectual activity
of the gentleman of leisure. He is no longer
simply the successful, aggressive male, the
man of strength, resource, and intrepidity. In
order to avoid stultification he must also cultivate
his tastes, for it now becomes incumbent on him to
discriminate with some nicety between the noble and
the ignoble in consumable goods. He becomes a
connoisseur in creditable viands of various degrees
of merit, in manly beverages and trinkets, in seemly
apparel and architecture, in weapons, games, dancers,
and the narcotics. This cultivation of aesthetic
faculty requires time and application, and the demands
made upon the gentleman in this direction therefore
tend to change his life of leisure into a more or less
arduous application to the business of learning how
to live a life of ostensible leisure in a becoming
way. Closely related to the requirement that the
gentleman must consume freely and of the right kind
of goods, there is the requirement that he must know
how to consume them in a seemly manner. His life
of leisure must be conducted in due form. Hence
arise good manners in the way pointed out in an earlier
chapter. High-bred manners and ways of living
are items of conformity to the norm of conspicuous
leisure and conspicuous consumption.
Conspicuous consumption of valuable
goods is a means of reputability to the gentleman
of leisure. As wealth accumulates on his hands,
his own unaided effort will not avail to sufficiently
put his opulence in evidence by this method.
The aid of friends and competitors is therefore brought
in by resorting to the giving of valuable presents
and expensive feasts and entertainments. Presents
and feasts had probably another origin than that of
naïve ostentation, but they required their utility
for this purpose very early, and they have retained
that character to the present; so that their utility
in this respect has now long been the substantial
ground on which these usages rest. Costly entertainments,
such as the potlatch or the ball, are peculiarly adapted
to serve this end. The competitor with whom the
entertainer wishes to institute a comparison is, by
this method, made to serve as a means to the end.
He consumes vicariously for his host at the same time
that he is witness to the consumption of that excess
of good things which his host is unable to dispose
of single-handed, and he is also made to witness his
host’s facility in etiquette.
In the giving of costly entertainments
other motives, of more genial kind, are of course
also present. The custom of festive gatherings
probably originated in motives of conviviality and
religion; these motives are also present in the later
development, but they do not continue to be the sole
motives. The latter-day leisure-class festivities
and entertainments may continue in some slight degree
to serve the religious need and in a higher degree
the needs of recreation and conviviality, but they
also serve an invidious purpose; and they serve it
none the less effectually for having a colorable non-invidious
ground in these more avowable motives. But the
economic effect of these social amenities is not therefore
lessened, either in the vicarious consumption of goods
or in the exhibition of difficult and costly achievements
in etiquette.
As wealth accumulates, the leisure
class develops further in function and structure,
and there arises a differentiation within the class.
There is a more or less elaborate system of rank and
grades. This differentiation is furthered by
the inheritance of wealth and the consequent inheritance
of gentility. With the inheritance of gentility
goes the inheritance of obligatory leisure; and gentility
of a sufficient potency to entail a life of leisure
may be inherited without the complement of wealth
required to maintain a dignified leisure. Gentle
blood may be transmitted without goods enough to afford
a reputably free consumption at one’s ease.
Hence results a class of impecunious gentlemen of
leisure, incidentally referred to already. These
half-caste gentlemen of leisure fall into a system
of hierarchical gradations. Those who stand near
the higher and the highest grades of the wealthy leisure
class, in point of birth, or in point of wealth, or
both, outrank the remoter-born and the pecuniarily
weaker. These lower grades, especially the impecunious,
or marginal, gentlemen of leisure, affiliate themselves
by a system of dependence or fealty to the great ones;
by so doing they gain an increment of repute, or of
the means with which to lead a life of leisure, from
their patron. They become his courtiers or retainers,
servants; and being fed and countenanced by their
patron they are indices of his rank and vicarious consumer
of his superfluous wealth. Many of these affiliated
gentlemen of leisure are at the same time lesser men
of substance in their own right; so that some of them
are scarcely at all, others only partially, to be rated
as vicarious consumers. So many of them, however,
as make up the retainer and hangers-on of the patron
may be classed as vicarious consumer without qualification.
Many of these again, and also many of the other aristocracy
of less degree, have in turn attached to their persons
a more or less comprehensive group of vicarious consumer
in the persons of their wives and children, their
servants, retainers, etc.
Throughout this graduated scheme of
vicarious leisure and vicarious consumption the rule
holds that these offices must be performed in some
such manner, or under some such circumstance or insignia,
as shall point plainly to the master to whom this
leisure or consumption pertains, and to whom therefore
the resulting increment of good repute of right inures.
The consumption and leisure executed by these persons
for their master or patron represents an investment
on his part with a view to an increase of good fame.
As regards feasts and largesses this is obvious
enough, and the imputation of repute to the host or
patron here takes place immediately, on the ground
of common notoriety. Where leisure and consumption
is performed vicariously by henchmen and retainers,
imputation of the resulting repute to the patron is
effected by their residing near his person so that
it may be plain to all men from what source they draw.
As the group whose good esteem is to be secured in
this way grows larger, more patent means are required
to indicate the imputation of merit for the leisure
performed, and to this end uniforms, badges, and liveries
come into vogue. The wearing of uniforms or liveries
implies a considerable degree of dependence, and may
even be said to be a mark of servitude, real or ostensible.
The wearers of uniforms and liveries may be roughly
divided into two classes-the free and the servile,
or the noble and the ignoble. The services performed
by them are likewise divisible into noble and ignoble.
Of course the distinction is not observed with strict
consistency in practice; the less debasing of the
base services and the less honorific of the noble
functions are not infrequently merged in the same person.
But the general distinction is not on that account
to be overlooked. What may add some perplexity
is the fact that this fundamental distinction between
noble and ignoble, which rests on the nature of the
ostensible service performed, is traversed by a secondary
distinction into honorific and humiliating, resting
on the rank of the person for whom the service is
performed or whose livery is worn. So, those offices
which are by right the proper employment of the leisure
class are noble; such as government, fighting, hunting,
the care of arms and accoutrements, and the like in
short, those which may be classed as ostensibly predatory
employments. On the other hand, those employments
which properly fall to the industrious class are ignoble;
such as handicraft or other productive labor, menial
services and the like. But a base service performed
for a person of very high degree may become a very
honorific office; as for instance the office of a Maid
of Honor or of a Lady in Waiting to the Queen, or
the King’s Master of the Horse or his Keeper
of the Hounds. The two offices last named suggest
a principle of some general bearing. Whenever,
as in these cases, the menial service in question
has to do directly with the primary leisure employments
of fighting and hunting, it easily acquires a reflected
honorific character. In this way great honor
may come to attach to an employment which in its own
nature belongs to the baser sort. In the later
development of peaceable industry, the usage of employing
an idle corps of uniformed men-at-arms gradually lapses.
Vicarious consumption by dependents bearing the insignia
of their patron or master narrows down to a corps
of liveried menials. In a heightened degree, therefore,
the livery comes to be a badge of servitude, or rather
servility. Something of a honorific character
always attached to the livery of the armed retainer,
but this honorific character disappears when the livery
becomes the exclusive badge of the menial. The
livery becomes obnoxious to nearly all who are required
to wear it. We are yet so little removed from
a state of effective slavery as still to be fully sensitive
to the sting of any imputation of servility.
This antipathy asserts itself even in the case of
the liveries or uniforms which some corporations prescribe
as the distinctive dress of their employees. In
this country the aversion even goes the length of
discrediting in a mild and uncertain way those
government employments, military and civil, which
require the wearing of a livery or uniform.
With the disappearance of servitude,
the number of vicarious consumers attached to any
one gentleman tends, on the whole, to decrease.
The like is of course true, and perhaps in a still
higher degree, of the number of dependents who perform
vicarious leisure for him. In a general way,
though not wholly nor consistently, these two groups
coincide. The dependent who was first delegated
for these duties was the wife, or the chief wife;
and, as would be expected, in the later development
of the institution, when the number of persons by
whom these duties are customarily performed gradually
narrows, the wife remains the last. In the higher
grades of society a large volume of both these kinds
of service is required; and here the wife is of course
still assisted in the work by a more or less numerous
corps of menials. But as we descend the social
scale, the point is presently reached where the duties
of vicarious leisure and consumption devolve upon
the wife alone. In the communities of the Western
culture, this point is at present found among the
lower middle class.
And here occurs a curious inversion.
It is a fact of common observance that in this lower
middle class there is no pretense of leisure on the
part of the head of the household. Through force
of circumstances it has fallen into disuse. But
the middle-class wife still carries on the business
of vicarious leisure, for the good name of the household
and its master. In descending the social scale
in any modern industrial community, the primary fact-the
conspicuous leisure of the master of the household-disappears
at a relatively high point. The head of the middle-class
household has been reduced by economic circumstances
to turn his hand to gaining a livelihood by occupations
which often partake largely of the character of industry,
as in the case of the ordinary business man of today.
But the derivative fact-the vicarious leisure and
consumption rendered by the wife, and the auxiliary
vicarious performance of leisure by menials-remains
in vogue as a conventionality which the demands of
reputability will not suffer to be slighted. It
is by no means an uncommon spectacle to find a man
applying himself to work with the utmost assiduity,
in order that his wife may in due form render for
him that degree of vicarious leisure which the common
sense of the time demands.
The leisure rendered by the wife in
such cases is, of course, not a simple manifestation
of idleness or indolence. It almost invariably
occurs disguised under some form of work or household
duties or social amenities, which prove on analysis
to serve little or no ulterior end beyond showing
that she does not occupy herself with anything that
is gainful or that is of substantial use. As
has already been noticed under the head of manners,
the greater part of the customary round of domestic
cares to which the middle-class housewife gives her
time and effort is of this character. Not that
the results of her attention to household matters,
of a decorative and mundificatory character, are not
pleasing to the sense of men trained in middle-class
proprieties; but the taste to which these effects
of household adornment and tidiness appeal is a taste
which has been formed under the selective guidance
of a canon of propriety that demands just these evidences
of wasted effort. The effects are pleasing to
us chiefly because we have been taught to find them
pleasing. There goes into these domestic duties
much solicitude for a proper combination of form and
color, and for other ends that are to be classed as
aesthetic in the proper sense of the term; and it is
not denied that effects having some substantial aesthetic
value are sometimes attained. Pretty much all
that is here insisted on is that, as regards these
amenities of life, the housewife’s efforts are
under the guidance of traditions that have been shaped
by the law of conspicuously wasteful expenditure of
time and substance. If beauty or comfort is achieved-and
it is a more or less fortuitous circumstance if they
are-they must be achieved by means and methods that
commend themselves to the great economic law of wasted
effort. The more reputable, “presentable”
portion of middle-class household paraphernalia are,
on the one hand, items of conspicuous consumption,
and on the other hand, apparatus for putting in evidence
the vicarious leisure rendered by the housewife.
The requirement of vicarious consumption
at the hands of the wife continues in force even at
a lower point in the pecuniary scale than the requirement
of vicarious leisure. At a point below which little
if any pretense of wasted effort, in ceremonial cleanness
and the like, is observable, and where there is assuredly
no conscious attempt at ostensible leisure, decency
still requires the wife to consume some goods conspicuously
for the reputability of the household and its head.
So that, as the latter-day outcome of this evolution
of an archaic institution, the wife, who was at the
outset the drudge and chattel of the man, both in
fact and in theory the producer of goods
for him to consume has become the ceremonial
consumer of goods which he produces. But she
still quite unmistakably remains his chattel in theory;
for the habitual rendering of vicarious leisure and
consumption is the abiding mark of the unfree servant.
This vicarious consumption practiced
by the household of the middle and lower classes can
not be counted as a direct expression of the leisure-class
scheme of life, since the household of this pecuniary
grade does not belong within the leisure class.
It is rather that the leisure-class scheme of life
here comes to an expression at the second remove.
The leisure class stands at the head of the social
structure in point of reputability; and its manner
of life and its standards of worth therefore afford
the norm of reputability for the community. The
observance of these standards, in some degree of approximation,
becomes incumbent upon all classes lower in the scale.
In modern civilized communities the lines of demarcation
between social classes have grown vague and transient,
and wherever this happens the norm of reputability
imposed by the upper class extends its coercive influence
with but slight hindrance down through the social
structure to the lowest strata. The result is
that the members of each stratum accept as their ideal
of decency the scheme of life in vogue in the next
higher stratum, and bend their energies to live up
to that ideal. On pain of forfeiting their good
name and their self-respect in case of failure, they
must conform to the accepted code, at least in appearance.
The basis on which good repute in any highly organized
industrial community ultimately rests is pecuniary
strength; and the means of showing pecuniary strength,
and so of gaining or retaining a good name, are leisure
and a conspicuous consumption of goods. Accordingly,
both of these methods are in vogue as far down the
scale as it remains possible; and in the lower strata
in which the two methods are employed, both offices
are in great part delegated to the wife and children
of the household. Lower still, where any degree
of leisure, even ostensible, has become impracticable
for the wife, the conspicuous consumption of goods
remains and is carried on by the wife and children.
The man of the household also can do something in
this direction, and indeed, he commonly does; but with
a still lower descent into the levels of indigence along
the margin of the slums the man, and presently
also the children, virtually cease to consume valuable
goods for appearances, and the woman remains virtually
the sole exponent of the household’s pecuniary
decency. No class of society, not even the most
abjectly poor, forgoes all customary conspicuous consumption.
The last items of this category of consumption are
not given up except under stress of the direst necessity.
Very much of squalor and discomfort will be endured
before the last trinket or the last pretense of pecuniary
decency is put away. There is no class and no
country that has yielded so abjectly before the pressure
of physical want as to deny themselves all gratification
of this higher or spiritual need.
From the foregoing survey of the growth
of conspicuous leisure and consumption, it appears
that the utility of both alike for the purposes of
reputability lies in the element of waste that is common
to both. In the one case it is a waste of time
and effort, in the other it is a waste of goods.
Both are methods of demonstrating the possession of
wealth, and the two are conventionally accepted as
equivalents. The choice between them is a question
of advertising expediency simply, except so far as
it may be affected by other standards of propriety,
springing from a different source. On grounds
of expediency the preference may be given to the one
or the other at different stages of the economic development.
The question is, which of the two methods will most
effectively reach the persons whose convictions it
is desired to affect. Usage has answered this
question in different ways under different circumstances.
So long as the community or social
group is small enough and compact enough to be effectually
reached by common notoriety alone that is to say,
so long as the human environment to which the individual
is required to adapt himself in respect of reputability
is comprised within his sphere of personal acquaintance
and neighborhood gossip so long the one
method is about as effective as the other. Each
will therefore serve about equally well during the
earlier stages of social growth. But when the
differentiation has gone farther and it becomes necessary
to reach a wider human environment, consumption begins
to hold over leisure as an ordinary means of decency.
This is especially true during the later, peaceable
economic stage. The means of communication and
the mobility of the population now expose the individual
to the observation of many persons who have no other
means of judging of his reputability than the display
of goods (and perhaps of breeding) which he is able
to make while he is under their direct observation.
The modern organization of industry
works in the same direction also by another line.
The exigencies of the modern industrial system frequently
place individuals and households in juxtaposition between
whom there is little contact in any other sense than
that of juxtaposition. One’s neighbors,
mechanically speaking, often are socially not one’s
neighbors, or even acquaintances; and still their transient
good opinion has a high degree of utility. The
only practicable means of impressing one’s pecuniary
ability on these unsympathetic observers of one’s
everyday life is an unremitting demonstration of ability
to pay. In the modern community there is also
a more frequent attendance at large gatherings of
people to whom one’s everyday life is unknown;
in such places as churches, theaters, ballrooms, hotels,
parks, shops, and the like. In order to impress
these transient observers, and to retain one’s
self-complacency under their observation, the signature
of one’s pecuniary strength should be written
in characters which he who runs may read. It
is evident, therefore, that the present trend of the
development is in the direction of heightening the
utility of conspicuous consumption as compared with
leisure.
It is also noticeable that the serviceability
of consumption as a means of repute, as well as the
insistence on it as an element of decency, is at its
best in those portions of the community where the human
contact of the individual is widest and the mobility
of the population is greatest. Conspicuous consumption
claims a relatively larger portion of the income of
the urban than of the rural population, and the claim
is also more imperative. The result is that,
in order to keep up a decent appearance, the former
habitually live hand-to-mouth to a greater extent
than the latter. So it comes, for instance, that
the American farmer and his wife and daughters are
notoriously less modish in their dress, as well as
less urbane in their manners, than the city artisan’s
family with an equal income. It is not that the
city population is by nature much more eager for the
peculiar complacency that comes of a conspicuous consumption,
nor has the rural population less regard for pecuniary
decency. But the provocation to this line of evidence,
as well as its transient effectiveness, is more decided
in the city. This method is therefore more readily
resorted to, and in the struggle to outdo one another
the city population push their normal standard of conspicuous
consumption to a higher point, with the result that
a relatively greater expenditure in this direction
is required to indicate a given degree of pecuniary
decency in the city. The requirement of conformity
to this higher conventional standard becomes mandatory.
The standard of decency is higher, class for class,
and this requirement of decent appearance must be
lived up to on pain of losing caste.
Consumption becomes a larger element
in the standard of living in the city than in the
country. Among the country population its place
is to some extent taken by savings and home comforts
known through the medium of neighborhood gossip sufficiently
to serve the like general purpose of Pecuniary repute.
These home comforts and the leisure indulged in where
the indulgence is found are of course also
in great part to be classed as items of conspicuous
consumption; and much the same is to be said of the
savings. The smaller amount of the savings laid
by by the artisan class is no doubt due, in some measure,
to the fact that in the case of the artisan the savings
are a less effective means of advertisement, relative
to the environment in which he is placed, than are
the savings of the people living on farms and in the
small villages. Among the latter, everybody’s
affairs, especially everybody’s pecuniary status,
are known to everybody else. Considered by itself
simply taken in the first degree this
added provocation to which the artisan and the urban
laboring classes are exposed may not very seriously
decrease the amount of savings; but in its cumulative
action, through raising the standard of decent expenditure,
its deterrent effect on the tendency to save cannot
but be very great.
A felicitous illustration of the manner
in which this canon of reputability works out its
results is seen in the practice of dram-drinking,
“treating,” and smoking in public places,
which is customary among the laborers and handicraftsmen
of the towns, and among the lower middle class of
the urban population generally Journeymen printers
may be named as a class among whom this form of conspicuous
consumption has a great vogue, and among whom it carries
with it certain well-marked consequences that are
often deprecated. The peculiar habits of the
class in this respect are commonly set down to some
kind of an ill-defined moral deficiency with which
this class is credited, or to a morally deleterious
influence which their occupation is supposed to exert,
in some unascertainable way, upon the men employed
in it. The state of the case for the men who
work in the composition and press rooms of the common
run of printing-houses may be summed up as follows.
Skill acquired in any printing-house or any city is
easily turned to account in almost any other house
or city; that is to say, the inertia due to special
training is slight. Also, this occupation requires
more than the average of intelligence and general
information, and the men employed in it are therefore
ordinarily more ready than many others to take advantage
of any slight variation in the demand for their labor
from one place to another. The inertia due to
the home feeling is consequently also slight.
At the same time the wages in the trade are high enough
to make movement from place to place relatively easy.
The result is a great mobility of the labor employed
in printing; perhaps greater than in any other equally
well-defined and considerable body of workmen.
These men are constantly thrown in contact with new
groups of acquaintances, with whom the relations established
are transient or ephemeral, but whose good opinion
is valued none the less for the time being. The
human proclivity to ostentation, reenforced by sentiments
of good-fellowship, leads them to spend freely in
those directions which will best serve these needs.
Here as elsewhere prescription seizes upon the custom
as soon as it gains a vogue, and incorporates it in
the accredited standard of decency. The next
step is to make this standard of decency the point
of departure for a new move in advance in the same
direction for there is no merit in simple
spiritless conformity to a standard of dissipation
that is lived up to as a matter of course by everyone
in the trade.
The greater prevalence of dissipation
among printers than among the average of workmen is
accordingly attributable, at least in some measure,
to the greater ease of movement and the more transient
character of acquaintance and human contact in this
trade. But the substantial ground of this high
requirement in dissipation is in the last analysis
no other than that same propensity for a manifestation
of dominance and pecuniary decency which makes the
French peasant-proprietor parsimonious and frugal,
and induces the American millionaire to found colleges,
hospitals and museums. If the canon of conspicuous
consumption were not offset to a considerable extent
by other features of human nature, alien to it, any
saving should logically be impossible for a population
situated as the artisan and laboring classes of the
cities are at present, however high their wages or
their income might be.
But there are other standards of repute
and other, more or less imperative, canons of conduct,
besides wealth and its manifestation, and some of
these come in to accentuate or to qualify the broad,
fundamental canon of conspicuous waste. Under
the simple test of effectiveness for advertising,
we should expect to find leisure and the conspicuous
consumption of goods dividing the field of pecuniary
emulation pretty evenly between them at the outset.
Leisure might then be expected gradually to yield
ground and tend to obsolescence as the economic development
goes forward, and the community increases in size;
while the conspicuous consumption of goods should
gradually gain in importance, both absolutely and
relatively, until it had absorbed all the available
product, leaving nothing over beyond a bare livelihood.
But the actual course of development has been somewhat
different from this ideal scheme. Leisure held
the first place at the start, and came to hold a rank
very much above wasteful consumption of goods, both
as a direct exponent of wealth and as an element in
the standard of decency, during the quasi-peaceable
culture. From that point onward, consumption has
gained ground, until, at present, it unquestionably
holds the primacy, though it is still far from absorbing
the entire margin of production above the subsistence
minimum.
The early ascendency of leisure as
a means of reputability is traceable to the archaic
distinction between noble and ignoble employments.
Leisure is honorable and becomes imperative partly
because it shows exemption from ignoble labor.
The archaic differentiation into noble and ignoble
classes is based on an invidious distinction between
employments as honorific or debasing; and this traditional
distinction grows into an imperative canon of decency
during the early quasi-peaceable stage. Its ascendency
is furthered by the fact that leisure is still fully
as effective an evidence of wealth as consumption.
Indeed, so effective is it in the relatively small
and stable human environment to which the individual
is exposed at that cultural stage, that, with the aid
of the archaic tradition which deprecates all productive
labor, it gives rise to a large impecunious leisure
class, and it even tends to limit the production of
the community’s industry to the subsistence minimum.
This extreme inhibition of industry is avoided because
slave labor, working under a compulsion more vigorous
than that of reputability, is forced to turn out a
product in excess of the subsistence minimum of the
working class. The subsequent relative decline
in the use of conspicuous leisure as a basis of repute
is due partly to an increasing relative effectiveness
of consumption as an evidence of wealth; but in part
it is traceable to another force, alien, and in some
degree antagonistic, to the usage of conspicuous waste.
This alien factor is the instinct
of workmanship. Other circumstances permitting,
that instinct disposes men to look with favor upon
productive efficiency and on whatever is of human use.
It disposes them to deprecate waste of substance or
effort. The instinct of workmanship is present
in all men, and asserts itself even under very adverse
circumstances. So that however wasteful a given
expenditure may be in reality, it must at least have
some colorable excuse in the way of an ostensible
purpose. The manner in which, under special circumstances,
the instinct eventuates in a taste for exploit and
an invidious discrimination between noble and ignoble
classes has been indicated in an earlier chapter.
In so far as it comes into conflict with the law of
conspicuous waste, the instinct of workmanship expresses
itself not so much in insistence on substantial usefulness
as in an abiding sense of the odiousness and aesthetic
impossibility of what is obviously futile. Being
of the nature of an instinctive affection, its guidance
touches chiefly and immediately the obvious and apparent
violations of its requirements. It is only less
promptly and with less constraining force that it
reaches such substantial violations of its requirements
as are appreciated only upon reflection.
So long as all labor continues to
be performed exclusively or usually by slaves, the
baseness of all productive effort is too constantly
and deterrently present in the mind of men to allow
the instinct of workmanship seriously to take effect
in the direction of industrial usefulness; but when
the quasi-peaceable stage (with slavery and status)
passes into the peaceable stage of industry (with wage
labor and cash payment) the instinct comes more effectively
into play. It then begins aggressively to shape
men’s views of what is meritorious, and asserts
itself at least as an auxiliary canon of self-complacency.
All extraneous considerations apart, those persons
(adult) are but a vanishing minority today who harbor
no inclination to the accomplishment of some end,
or who are not impelled of their own motion to shape
some object or fact or relation for human use.
The propensity may in large measure be overborne by
the more immediately constraining incentive to a reputable
leisure and an avoidance of indecorous usefulness,
and it may therefore work itself out in make-believe
only; as for instance in “social duties,”
and in quasi-artistic or quasi-scholarly accomplishments,
in the care and decoration of the house, in sewing-circle
activity or dress reform, in proficiency at dress,
cards, yachting, golf, and various sports. But
the fact that it may under stress of circumstances
eventuate in inanitiés no more disproves the
presence of the instinct than the reality of the brooding
instinct is disproved by inducing a hen to sit on
a nestful of china eggs.
This latter-day uneasy reaching-out
for some form of purposeful activity that shall at
the same time not be indecorously productive of either
individual or collective gain marks a difference of
attitude between the modern leisure class and that
of the quasi-peaceable stage. At the earlier
stage, as was said above, the all-dominating institution
of slavery and status acted resistlessly to discountenance
exertion directed to other than naively predatory
ends. It was still possible to find some habitual
employment for the inclination to action in the way
of forcible aggression or repression directed against
hostile groups or against the subject classes within
the group; and this sewed to relieve the pressure
and draw off the energy of the leisure class without
a resort to actually useful, or even ostensibly useful
employments. The practice of hunting also sewed
the same purpose in some degree. When the community
developed into a peaceful industrial organization,
and when fuller occupation of the land had reduced
the opportunities for the hunt to an inconsiderable
residue, the pressure of energy seeking purposeful
employment was left to find an outlet in some other
direction. The ignominy which attaches to useful
effort also entered upon a less acute phase with the
disappearance of compulsory labor; and the instinct
of workmanship then came to assert itself with more
persistence and consistency.
The line of least resistance has changed
in some measure, and the energy which formerly found
a vent in predatory activity, now in part takes the
direction of some ostensibly useful end. Ostensibly
purposeless leisure has come to be deprecated, especially
among that large portion of the leisure class whose
plebeian origin acts to set them at variance with
the tradition of the otium cum dignitate.
But that canon of reputability which discountenances
all employment that is of the nature of productive
effort is still at hand, and will permit nothing beyond
the most transient vogue to any employment that is
substantially useful or productive. The consequence
is that a change has been wrought in the conspicuous
leisure practiced by the leisure class; not so much
in substance as in form. A reconciliation between
the two conflicting requirements is effected by a
resort to make-believe. Many and intricate polite
observances and social duties of a ceremonial nature
are developed; many organizations are founded, with
some specious object of amelioration embodied in their
official style and title; there is much coming and
going, and a deal of talk, to the end that the talkers
may not have occasion to reflect on what is the effectual
economic value of their traffic. And along with
the make-believe of purposeful employment, and woven
inextricably into its texture, there is commonly, if
not invariably, a more or less appreciable element
of purposeful effort directed to some serious end.
In the narrower sphere of vicarious
leisure a similar change has gone forward. Instead
of simply passing her time in visible idleness, as
in the best days of the patriarchal regime, the housewife
of the advanced peaceable stage applies herself assiduously
to household cares. The salient features of this
development of domestic service have already been
indicated. Throughout the entire evolution of
conspicuous expenditure, whether of goods or of services
or human life, runs the obvious implication that in
order to effectually mend the consumer’s good
fame it must be an expenditure of superfluities.
In order to be reputable it must be wasteful.
No merit would accrue from the consumption of the
bare necessaries of life, except by comparison with
the abjectly poor who fall short even of the subsistence
minimum; and no standard of expenditure could result
from such a comparison, except the most prosaic and
unattractive level of decency. A standard of life
would still be possible which should admit of invidious
comparison in other respects than that of opulence;
as, for instance, a comparison in various directions
in the manifestation of moral, physical, intellectual,
or aesthetic force. Comparison in all these directions
is in vogue today; and the comparison made in these
respects is commonly so inextricably bound up with
the pecuniary comparison as to be scarcely distinguishable
from the latter. This is especially true as regards
the current rating of expressions of intellectual
and aesthetic force or proficiency’ so that
we frequently interpret as aesthetic or intellectual
a difference which in substance is pecuniary only.
The use of the term “waste”
is in one respect an unfortunate one. As used
in the speech of everyday life the word carries an
undertone of deprecation. It is here used for
want of a better term that will adequately describe
the same range of motives and of phenomena, and it
is not to be taken in an odious sense, as implying
an illegitimate expenditure of human products or of
human life. In the view of economic theory the
expenditure in question is no more and no less legitimate
than any other expenditure. It is here called
“waste” because this expenditure does
not serve human life or human well-being on the whole,
not because it is waste or misdirection of effort or
expenditure as viewed from the standpoint of the individual
consumer who chooses it. If he chooses it, that
disposes of the question of its relative utility to
him, as compared with other forms of consumption that
would not be deprecated on account of their wastefulness.
Whatever form of expenditure the consumer chooses,
or whatever end he seeks in making his choice, has
utility to him by virtue of his preference. As
seen from the point of view of the individual consumer,
the question of wastefulness does not arise within
the scope of economic theory proper. The use of
the word “waste” as a technical term, therefore,
implies no deprecation of the motives or of the ends
sought by the consumer under this canon of conspicuous
waste.
But it is, on other grounds, worth
noting that the term “waste” in the language
of everyday life implies deprecation of what is characterized
as wasteful. This common-sense implication is
itself an outcropping of the instinct of workmanship.
The popular reprobation of waste goes to say that
in order to be at peace with himself the common man
must be able to see in any and all human effort and
human enjoyment an enhancement of life and well-being
on the whole. In order to meet with unqualified
approval, any economic fact must approve itself under
the test of impersonal usefulness usefulness
as seen from the point of view of the generically
human. Relative or competitive advantage of one
individual in comparison with another does not satisfy
the economic conscience, and therefore competitive
expenditure has not the approval of this conscience.
In strict accuracy nothing should
be included under the head of conspicuous waste but
such expenditure as is incurred on the ground of an
invidious pecuniary comparison. But in order to
bring any given item or element in under this head
it is not necessary that it should be recognized as
waste in this sense by the person incurring the expenditure.
It frequently happens that an element of the standard
of living which set out with being primarily wasteful,
ends with becoming, in the apprehension of the consumer,
a necessary of life; and it may in this way become
as indispensable as any other item of the consumer’s
habitual expenditure. As items which sometimes
fall under this head, and are therefore available
as illustrations of the manner in which this principle
applies, may be cited carpets and tapestries, silver
table service, waiter’s services, silk hats,
starched linen, many articles of jewelry and of dress.
The indispensability of these things after the habit
and the convention have been formed, however, has little
to say in the classification of expenditures as waste
or not waste in the technical meaning of the word.
The test to which all expenditure must be brought
in an attempt to decide that point is the question
whether it serves directly to enhance human life on
the whole-whether it furthers the life process taken
impersonally. For this is the basis of award of
the instinct of workmanship, and that instinct is the
court of final appeal in any question of economic
truth or adequacy. It is a question as to the
award rendered by a dispassionate common sense.
The question is, therefore, not whether, under the
existing circumstances of individual habit and social
custom, a given expenditure conduces to the particular
consumer’s gratification or peace of mind; but
whether, aside from acquired tastes and from the canons
of usage and conventional decency, its result is a
net gain in comfort or in the fullness of life.
Customary expenditure must be classed under the head
of waste in so far as the custom on which it rests
is traceable to the habit of making an invidious pecuniary
comparison-in so far as it is conceived that it could
not have become customary and prescriptive without
the backing of this principle of pecuniary reputability
or relative economic success. It is obviously
not necessary that a given object of expenditure should
be exclusively wasteful in order to come in under the
category of conspicuous waste. An article may
be useful and wasteful both, and its utility to the
consumer may be made up of use and waste in the most
varying proportions. Consumable goods, and even
productive goods, generally show the two elements
in combination, as constituents of their utility;
although, in a general way, the element of waste tends
to predominate in articles of consumption, while the
contrary is true of articles designed for productive
use. Even in articles which appear at first glance
to serve for pure ostentation only, it is always possible
to detect the presence of some, at least ostensible,
useful purpose; and on the other hand, even in special
machinery and tools contrived for some particular
industrial process, as well as in the rudest appliances
of human industry, the traces of conspicuous waste,
or at least of the habit of ostentation, usually become
evident on a close scrutiny. It would be hazardous
to assert that a useful purpose is ever absent from
the utility of any article or of any service, however
obviously its prime purpose and chief element is conspicuous
waste; and it would be only less hazardous to assert
of any primarily useful product that the element of
waste is in no way concerned in its value, immediately
or remotely.