Law Text Culture Volume 9 Legal Spaces Article 6 2005 On Rivera's 'Detroit Industry': community beyond knowledge J. McKay University of British Columbia Follow this and additional works at: https://ro.uow.edu.au/ltc Recommended Citation McKay, J., On Rivera's 'Detroit Industry': community beyond knowledge, Law Text Culture, 9, 2005. Available at:https://ro.uow.edu.au/ltc/vol9/iss1/6 Research Online is the open access institutional repository for the University of Wollongong. For further information contact the UOW Library:
[email protected] On Rivera's 'Detroit Industry': community beyond knowledge Abstract In this essay I will read one of the Mexican muralist Diego Rivera's (1886-1957) most important works, 'Detroit Industry' (1932-33, Detroit Institute of Arts [DIA], Detroit, Michigan, USA), as a work about the nature of community construction. 'Detroit Industry' depicts a car factory in Detroit in the early 1930s, the labour processes that are involved in the production of the car, and the community's labour that sustains and reproduces itself. Rivera is a communist straightforwardly depicting labour and alienation in the capitalist mode of production, and the problems that this presents for building a community. The Marxist critique of the bourgeois state is at the core of the problematic of community construction, though not the sole difficulty. This journal article is available in Law Text Culture: https://ro.uow.edu.au/ltc/vol9/iss1/6 On Riveras Detroit Industry: community beyond knowledge John McKay1 Introduction In this essay I will read one of the Mexican muralist Diego Riveras (18861957) most important works, Detroit Industry (193233, Detroit Institute of Arts [DIA], Detroit, Michigan, USA), as a work about the nature of community construction.