This book critically engages with the proliferation of literature on postcapitalism, which is rapidly becoming an urgent area of inquiry, both in academic scholarship and in public life. It collects the insights from scholars working across the field of Critical International Political Economy to interrogate how we might begin to envisage a political economy of postcapitalism.
The authors foreground the agency of workers and other capitalist subjects, and their desire to engage in a range of radical experiments in decommodification and democratisation both in the workplace and in their daily lives. It includes a broad range of ideas including the future of social reproduction, human capital circulation, political Islam, the political economy of exclusion and eco-communities.
Rather than focusing on the ending of capitalism as an implosion of the value-money form, this book focuses on the dream of equal participation in the determination of people’s shared collective destiny.
Spis treści
Introduction: The Endings Of Capitalism Beyond Crisis and Hope – Adam Fishwick and Nicholas Kiersey (De Montfort University & University of Texas Rio Grande Valley)
1. Critical IPE and the End of History – Owen Worth (University of Limerick)
2. Dialectical Ends and Beginnings: Why Barbarism at the End of Capitalism Means Barbarism Beyond Capitalism – Bryant William Sculos (Worcester State University)
3. A New Wheel to Keep Capitalism Moving?: The Artificial Womb in Feminist Futures and the Capitalist Present – Catia Gregoratti and Laura Horn (Lund University & Roskilde University)
4. Development Alternatives: Old Challenges and New Hybridities in China and Latin America – Paul Bowles and Henry Veltmeyer (University of Northern British Columbia & Universidad Autonoma de Zacatecas)
5. 'Property Belongs to Allah; Capital, Get Out!’ Turkey’s Anti-Capitalist Muslims and the Concept of Alternatives to Capitalism – Gorkem Altinors (Bilecik University)
6. Belaboured Markets: Imagining a More Democratic Global Economic Order – Jonathon W. Moses (Norwegian University of Science & Technology)
7. Belaboured Markets: Imagining a More Democratic Global Economic Order – Jonathon W. Moses
8. Post-capitalism and Associated Reactions: Mapping Alternative Routes and Transcending Strategic Certainty – David J. Bailey (University of Birmingham)
9. Mapping Postcapitalist Futures in Dark Times – Adam Fishwick (De Montfort University)
10. The Distance Between Two Dreams: Post Neoliberalism and the Politics of Awakening – Japhy Wilson (University of Manchester)
11. Socialist Governmentality and the Problem of the Capital Strike: A Defence of Fully Automated Luxury Communism – Nicholas Kiersey (University of Texas Rio Grande Valley)
Afterword: Living in the Catastrophe – Adam Fishwick and Nicholas Kiersey (De Montfort University & University of Texas Rio Grande Valley)
Notes on Contributors
Index
O autorze
Nicholas Kiersey is a Professor of Political Science at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley. His research addresses austerity, biopolitics, and the crises of the neoliberal capitalist state. He is currently working on a book about socialist governmentality, and the cultural political economy of the end of capitalism.