by F. Vandenberghe
Logos, a journal of modern society & culture
Fall 2013: Vol 12, No 3
Until fairly recently, reification was a central diagnostic concept
of critical social theory and social philosophy. Due to its heavy
metaphysical baggage and its grounding in an obsolescent philosophy of
history, the theory of reification has, however, lost much of its
credibility and prestige. To explain, describe and criticize various
forms of dehumanization in modern capitalist societies, it is
occasionally rediscovered, refurbished and actualized by authors within
the Marxist tradition of Left Hegelianism. Through a grand narrative of
reification, systemic processes of commodification, exploitation and
domination that lead to a loss of community (anomie), meaning
(disenchantment) and freedom (domination) are connected to a
phenomenological description of the alienation of the modern self from
itself, others and the world. As a critical category, reification
squarely ascribes the blame of alienation to the system. The
denunciation of reification is paradoxical, however: to the extent that
it presupposes that the object is really a subject, it denies what it
affirms (that the world is inhuman) and affirms what it denies (namely
that there still is a subject that can act and change the world).
Literally, reification (Verdinglichung) refers to the
transformation of human properties, relations, processes, actions,
concepts, etc. into things. As a technical term, the term reification
emerged in the English language in the 1860s out of the contraction of
the verb facere (to make) and the substantive res (thing), which can refer both to concrete and empirically observable things (ens) and to abstract, indeterminate things (aliquid).
As a synonym of ‘thingification,’ the inverse of personification,
reification metaphorically refers to the transformation of human
properties, relations, processes, actions, concepts, etc. into res,
into things that act as pseudo-persons, endowed with a life of their
own. Depending on the grammatical subject of reification – who reifies
what: is it the analyst who reifies the concepts or is it society that
alienates the subjects? – the transformation of human properties, social
relations, abstract concepts, etc. into things, types and numbers can
operate both on an epistemological and on a social level. Both levels
are united by an ontology of practices and a common insistence on the
primacy of action over structure. In the philosophy of the social
sciences, the concept is used to criticize structuralist, naturalist and
positivist theories that hypostatize macro-social entities, dehumanize
action and naturalize the system from a dialectical and praxeological
position. In Marxist-Hegelian social philosophy, the concept is used by
theorists related to the Frankfurt School to criticize capitalism´s
systemically induced social pathologies of the life-world that distort
the relation between actors and the world, the others and the self and
bring the dialectics between agency and structure to a standstill. The
concept is never a neutral one. Positive instances of reification
(Gehlen, Latour, Virno) are rather rare, though. Usually, the concept is
used polemically to denounce the ‘violence of abstractions,’ either of
conceptual abstractions (Denkabstraktionen) that suppress the
reflexive embeddedness of concepts into their social context, treat
social facts as things, and transform metasubjects into megasubjects, or
of real abstractions (Realabstraktionen) that strip individuals of their autonomy and reduce them to cogs of an abstract social machinery.
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