A Political Economy of the Senses: Neoliberalism, Reification, Critique - New Directions in Critical Theory - Chari, Anita (University of Oregon) - Książki - Columbia University Press - 9780231173889 - 13 października 2015
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A Political Economy of the Senses: Neoliberalism, Reification, Critique - New Directions in Critical Theory

Chari, Anita (University of Oregon)

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A Political Economy of the Senses: Neoliberalism, Reification, Critique - New Directions in Critical Theory

Revives the key concept of reification from Marx and the Frankfurt School to spotlight the resistance to neoliberal capitalism now forming


Marc Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Review Quotes:"A Political Economy of the Senses" is a brilliantly conceptualized and ambitious project. This captivating work is written with an acute sense of authorship and even a sense of mission. It articulates an experiential critique of capital, which is a noble and much needed intellectual endeavor, striking at the heart of our current predicament. Anita Chari achieves her goal with merciless, yet gracious, intellectual resolve.--Albena Azmanova, University of KentReview Quotes: Neoliberalism is one of the most potent phenomena of our time and one of the most strangely resistant to critique. Anita Chari takes a provocative approach in" A Political Economy of the Senses," expanding our palette of critical resources with important insights about aesthetics and reification. This is a timely, creative book about some of the most urgent problems of our day.--Kevin Olson, University of California, IrvineReview Quotes: Anita Chari's "The Political Economy of the Senses" represents the rise of a new, dynamic critical theory for the twenty-first century. It offers at one and the same time a critique of neoliberalism's inversion of the political, a renewal of the dialectical imagination of the early Frankfurt School, and an aesthetic-based re-materialization of the political subject. Occupy Wall Street emerges in these pages not as a fleeting historical event, but as the signifier of a new, open-ended human potential for emancipation to be actively constructed in the social praxis of our time.--John Bellamy Foster, editor, "Monthly Review," professor of sociology, University of Oregon, author of "Marx's Ecology"Review Quotes: Chari understands we are all performers, and the performance of critique needs new vantage points for observing, and more sensitivity to embodied critique all around us. Her text aims to deconstruct the theoretical carousel. We are left with important questions: how can we materialize critique? How can we start to recognize this materialization when it is happening right in front of us? Can we all agree there is more to consider before we perform our knowledge? The risk if we don't is our inability to conceive of a transformative moment.--Jason LazarusTable of Contents: AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Toward the Materialization of CritiquePart I. Neoliberal Symptoms1. Neoliberal Symptoms: The Impasse Between Economics and Politics in Contemporary Political Theory2. Neoliberalism and Normative Ambivalence: Third-Generation Critical Theory and the Fetish of IntersubjectivityPart II. The Critique of Reification3. Alienation and Depoliticization: Rejoining Radical Democracy with the Critique of Capitalism4. Luk?cs's Turn to a Political Economy of the Senses5. The Reversibility of Reification: Adorno from the Aesthetic to the SocialPart III. A Political Economy of the Senses6. Defetishizing Fetishes: Art and the Critique of Capital in Neoliberal Society7. Occupy Wall Street: Challenging Neoliberal ReificationNotesBibliographyIndexReview Quotes:"A Political Economy of the Senses" represents the rise of a new, dynamic critical theory for the twenty-first century. It offers at once a critique of neoliberalism's inversion of the political, a renewal of the dialectical imagination of the early Frankfurt School, and an aesthetic-based re-materialization of the political subject. Occupy Wall Street emerges in these pages not as a fleeting historical event but as the signifier of a new, open-ended human potential for emancipation to be actively constructed in the social praxis of our time.--John Bellamy Foster, editor of the "Monthly Review" and author of "Marx's Ecology"Biographical Note: Anita Chari is assistant professor of political science at the University of Oregon. In addition to her work as a critical theorist, she is a creative writer, composer, and musician. Review Quotes: Anita Chari understands we are all performers, and the performance of critique needs new vantage points for observing and more sensitivity to embodied critique all around us. Her text aims to deconstruct the theoretical carousel. We are left with important questions: how can we materialize critique? How can we start to recognize this materialization when it is happening right in front of us? Can we all agree there is more to consider before we perform our knowledge? The risk if we don't is our inability to conceive of a transformative moment.--Jason Lazarus, University of South Florida

Media Książki     Hardcover Book   (Książka z twardym grzbietem i okładką)
Wydane 13 października 2015
ISBN13 9780231173889
Wydawcy Columbia University Press
Strony 280
Wymiary 235 × 162 × 19 mm   ·   508 g