£120.00

Routledge Affective Economies, Neoliberalism, and Governmentality

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Description

Product Description Advanced capitalism is characterized by a level of symbolic production that not only results in a dematerialization of labor, but also increasingly relies on highly emotional components, ranging from consumption desire to workforce management. Feelings as varied as love, anger, and desire are integral to neoliberal processes, though not in unproblematic and monolithic ways. Whereas some accounts decry capitalism’s hold on the emotional realm, as the commodified search for soul mates through online dating sites or Starbucks’ promotion of fair-trade coffee suggest, others counter that emotions represent a privileged site of resistance to market rationality. Relying on different case studies ranging from drone strikes, the 2008 economic crisis in Ireland, and marriage migration management, this volume builds on this productive tension between subjection and resistance through the lenses of the concept of governmentality. Developed by Michel Foucault, governmentality sheds light on the ways in which economic and political life are now being managed through logics of security and economic calculations. This volume explores how individuals might become emotionally attached to regimes of power that are detrimental to them, how neoliberal processes are concomitant with the valorization of certain emotional dispositions, and how affective economies might provide a site of resistance. This book was published as a special issue of Global Society. About the Author Anne-Marie D’Aoust is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at the Université du Québec à Montréal. Her research focuses on the connections between love, governmentality and security practices. Her recent publications appeared in International Political Sociology, and Disciplining the Transnational Mobility of People (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).

Product Specifications

Format
Hardcover
Domain
Amazon UK
Release Date
04 March 2015
Listed Since
31 July 2014

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