Toward the Materialization of Critique

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P O L I T I CA L ECONOMY OF THE S E N S E S

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N EOL IBE RA L I SM , RE IF ICATIO N , C RITIQU E

A N I TA C H A R I


INTRODUCTION Toward the Materialization of Critique

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HIS IS

a book about how critical theory can address the forms of domination that have emerged in the context of neoliberal capitalism. It is a book that seeks to make critique more responsive to changes in the relationship between politics and economics in neoliberalism by joining two powerful methods of critique: theories of radical democracy on the one hand and critiques of political economy on the other. In this introduction I explain why this is such a crucial task for contemporary theory. In the two decades following the collapse of actually existing socialism, victorious capitalism seemed to be the order of the day. As the world crossed the threshold of the so-called end of history, ideological resistance to capitalismā€”in the United States above allā€”receded into the background, even in the face of the blatant contradictions and injustices that postindustrial societies faced in the wake of the post-Fordist ļ¬‚exibilization of labor, economic recession, and the erosion of the welfare state. But the ļ¬nancial crisis of 2008 has brought the inequalities and injustices of capitalism as a mode of political and economic organization abruptly into public consciousness, both in the American context and globally. In 2008 the nation witnessed a steady stream of bad economic news, including the fallout of the U.S. housing bubble, the subsequent failure


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of government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, and the hugely unpopular Troubled Assets Relief Program, which spent $700 billion to bail out major banks and ļ¬nancial institutions that were deemed ā€œtoo big to fail.ā€ The consequence was the conversion of a ļ¬nancial crisis into a budgetary crisis at the national level whose eļ¬€ects continue to be palpable in the daily lives of Americans who currently face high levels of debt and unemployment as the already thin protections of the state grow only thinner, both in the United States and worldwide. Yet the bailout of big ļ¬nancial institutions had at least one salutary eļ¬€ect: it made unmistakably visible the logic of neoliberal capitalism by dissolving the appearance of separation between the state and the economy, a ļ¬ction that had sustained citizenā€™s investments in a state that could clearly no longer guarantee citizenā€™s economic welfare. No more could one cling to the liberal fantasy of a bounded state that allowed the market to operate unimpeded. Instead, the bailout and the subsequent stimulus (deemed by most to be far too miserly to achieve its goals of economic recovery) revealed the ambivalent relationship of the neoliberal state to the economyā€”this was a strong state when bailing out banks, a weak state when it came to providing social services; a strong state when it came to policing, a weak state when it came to education. The bailout crushed the appearance of separation between the state and Wall Street, revealed them to be old cronies and arguably, in so doing, created the space for new modes of political struggle against the logics of neoliberalism to emerge. Occupy Wall Street and the protests of neoliberal policies in Wisconsin are just two domestic examples of the vast political terrain that has opened up in the wake of the ļ¬nancial crisis. This book examines the implications of the neoliberal transformation of the relationship between politics and economics for contemporary political theory. It argues that the polarization of two dominant approaches to contemporary political theory, namely neo-Marxism and radical democratic theory, has created an impasse that renders these theories insuļ¬ƒciently attuned to the ways in which the neoliberal negotiation of the boundary between economics and politics has transformed the content of the political. To the extent that progressive political theories fail to account for this transformation, which is both


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conceptual and practical, they risk producing theories that reinscribe rather than critique neoliberal forms of domination. These two inļ¬‚uential approaches in contemporary political theory on the left have tended to take divergent positions on how best to theorize a radical, transformative politics in the context of the neoliberal revolution. On the one hand, Marxist approaches, advanced by theorists such as Moishe Postone and David Harvey, have argued for an analysis of the macroeconomic dynamics of contemporary society as a way of understanding the political potential of contemporary radical social movements. On the other hand, theorists of radical democracy, such as Jacques RanciĆØre, Ernesto Laclau, Chantal Mouļ¬€e, and William Connolly, among others, have argued in favor of a theory of dissensual politics that deļ¬nes itself through the recasting of the aesthetic, subjective, and perceptual matrix of social life in ways that interrupt and suspend neoliberal forms of domination on a register that is altogether parallel to economic forms of mediation. These two methods of critique, Marxist and radical democratic, have in recent decades posed themselves in opposition to one another.1 Yet, on the heels of the political ferment of 2011, social movements have emerged to challenge the feasibility of the theoretical split between notions of radical democracy and critiques of political economy. The Occupy movement, which became the ļ¬rst populist social movement in decades to pose a visible and broad-based radical challenge to the existing order in the United States, rejected the separation between economics and politics in American life as the cornerstone of neoliberal ideology and practice. Organizing and sleeping in ā€œpublicprivateā€ spaces, protesting home foreclosures, boycotting big banks, and buying back the debt of average American citizens, Occupy showed the necessity of tackling neoliberalism on its own terms, and those terms maintained that economics and politics were separate, even while granting personhood to corporations and forbidding individuals to assemble in so-called public spaces. Dismantling the neoliberal stateā€™s ideology of separation between economics and politics required Occupy to furthermore work within the impasse between Marxist critiques of political economy and agonistic theories of radical democracy. The impasse created in theory, between a theoretical approach that prioritizes political economy versus a theory that highlights the


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autonomy of the political from the economic, was also revealed to be an impasse in practice that would have to be refashioned in new terms in order to develop a historically speciļ¬c critique of neoliberalism relevant to the present. This book proposes a ā€œpolitical economy of the sensesā€ as a synthesis of these two approaches, Marxist and radical democratic, whose urgency is indicated by the theoretical innovations in recent decades of movements like Occupy, the World Social Forum, the Zapatista movement, and the uprisings against neoliberal austerity throughout Europe. With the notion of a political economy of the senses, I propose a form of critique that joins an analysis of abstract dynamics of political economy and capital accumulation with an understanding of the experiential and aesthetic dimensions of neoliberal society. As such, a political economy of the senses takes seriously the relationship between economics and subject formation and seeks to understand political subject formation as aļ¬€ected not only by cognitive modes of the critique of neoliberalism but perhaps more fundamentally by forms of critique that touch on the aļ¬€ective, embodied, and sensate dimensions of political experience. Moreover, it understands political practices as themselves performative of theory and in this sense entails what I call the materialization of critique. I understand the materialization of critique as the shift from a form of theory that is merely cognitive to a form of theory that is understood as embodied in material objects, practices, and events themselves. My vehicle for constructing the political economy of the senses, as I will elaborate, is the concept of reiļ¬cation from the critical theory tradition.

REIFICATION AND THE POLITICAL SUBJECTIVITY OF NEOLIBERALISM There are many reasons, both historical and political, for the persistence of the theoretical impasse between neo-Marxism and radical democratic theory. Those reasons have much to do with the historical record of actually existing socialism, as well as with the critical legacy of anticolonial, antiracist, and antiauthoritarian struggles of the 1960s.


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Yet there was a period in the history of political thought in which the critique of capitalism and the concept of radical democracy were intimately tied. The tradition of critical theory, from the works of Karl Marx himself to the works of Gyƶrgy LukĆ”cs, Theodor Adorno, and other members of the Frankfurt School, was centrally engaged in articulating the social, political, and cultural dimensions of capitalist society. Eschewing reductionist formulations of the relationship between economics and politics, these critical theorists made use of a rich array of concepts that were useful for understanding the challenges that capitalism posed for the realization of human autonomy. While their theories were developed with an eye to understanding capitalism in an earlier phase that diļ¬€ers in signiļ¬cant ways from our own, this book argues that a reconstruction of a key concept from the critical theory lexicon can be of great value in reorienting political theory in the context of neoliberal forms of domination. This book reconstructs the concept of reiļ¬cation as a tool for constructing a political economy of the senses in the neoliberal context. I suggest that the critique of reiļ¬cation is a useful theoretical vehicle for motivating the materialization of critique, which is of crucial signiļ¬cance in neoliberalism. The concept of reiļ¬cation, after all, refers to the very process of becoming material and ā€œthinglyā€ in its etymology. According to LukĆ”cs, who developed the concept through a deep engagement with Karl Marxā€™s critique of political economy, reiļ¬cation is the central social pathology of capitalist society.2 Reiļ¬cation, he argued, is above all an unengaged, spectatorial stance that individuals take toward the social world and toward their own practicesā€”it is the subjective stance individuals take toward a society in which the economy exists as a separate, self-grounding, and autonomous realm of social life, operating in a way that is seemingly independent of human will. Reiļ¬ed subjectivity is a formalist and spectatorial form of subjectivity that is unable to see its own involvement in the broader processes of capital that comprise its domination. It is a form of subjectivity that is unable to grasp its own practice within the context of the social totality. At the heart of LukĆ”csā€™s critique of reiļ¬cation is a critique not only of capitalist forms of labor but also of capitalist thought forms (also forms of labor),3 which reinforce capitalism as a fragmented and alienated


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form of life and play out the formalism and abstraction of capitalist labor at the level of thought. Reiļ¬cation, so I will argue, is a useful concept for grasping neoliberal forms of domination, as well as for conceptualizing resistance to those forms in a way that resists the polarization between Marxist and radical democratic approaches that I highlighted earlier. This is, ļ¬rst, because reiļ¬cation provides an account of the relationship between forms of subjectivity and the structure of capitalism. The concept of reiļ¬cation helps to articulate the ways in which capitalist domination exceeds what is typically understood by the ā€œeconomicā€ sphere in the narrow sense. In a time in which we are witnessing profound transformations in the relationship between the economy, culture, and politics, transformations that destabilize ļ¬xed distinctions between any of these categories, reiļ¬cation provides a language for talking about the new articulations of the political that have emerged as a consequence. Some examples of the transformations in the nature of capitalist production to which I am referring include the informatization of the economy and the rise of what Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt have named ā€œimmaterial laborā€ within the ļ¬eld of production.4 Relatedly, the development of communication technologies, such as the Internet and social media technologies, have rendered the ļ¬eld of culture and communication a major arena for the expansion of commodiļ¬cation. And the ever increasing hypermobility of laboring bodies has changed perceptions of the boundaries between public and private, labor and leisure, and human being and worker. Such transformations in the nature of the capitalist mode of production over the last two decades provoke an important observation: the contemporary situation does not lend itself to being understood in terms of a clear distinction between the strictly economic dimensions of capitalism, commodity production, and the ā€œsuperstructuralā€ aspects of capitalism, the beliefs, desires, perceptions, and lifestyles accompanying commodity production. This is not only because the base/ superstructure metaphor has perhaps always encouraged a reductionist understanding of the processes of capitalism, but even more importantly, because the real processes of capitalist production today increasingly rely upon beliefs, desires, perceptions, aļ¬€ects and attitudes, at the level of commodity production itself. These shifts have


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radically altered the position of subjectivity within the ļ¬eld of capitalist production, that is to say, how subjects are becoming involved in the processes of capitalist production. Such transformations indicate an urgent need to reļ¬‚ect upon the shifting boundaries of the political in this context in order to develop a critical vocabulary that illuminates emergent democratic possibilities. Reiļ¬cation critique therefore provides a much needed vehicle for thinking about the micropolitical dimensions of capitalā€”the quotidian practices that constitute, reproduce, and challenge the capitalist way of lifeā€”as well as for thinking about the kinds of practices that could foster postcapitalist forms of democracy. It is in this sense that reiļ¬cation critique can be of great use in arriving at a historically speciļ¬c understanding of democratic practice for the contemporary moment.5 As radical democrats have emphasized, many of the most important social and political movements of our time are micropolitical in natureā€”they are centrally concerned with forms of subjectivation.6 But radical democratic theorists, challenging the reductionism of orthodox Marxism, have tended to deny the importance of understanding what Jason Read has called the ā€œmicro-politics of capital,ā€ to the detriment of democratic theory.7 My reconstruction of the critique of reiļ¬cation connects the crucial micropolitical, experiential emphasis of radical democratic theory with an understanding of its relationship to the abstract dynamics of capital.8 Alongside the theory of subject production in capitalism that a critique of reiļ¬cation can help to articulate, reiļ¬cation critique is moreover essential for a political economy of the senses insofar as it provides a critique of a merely cognitivist form of theory. It gives an account of the theory-praxis relationship in neoliberalism and locates a key barrier to the eļ¬€ectivity of critique in its formalism and cognitivism. LukĆ”cs described these issues through his exploration of what he called the ā€œantinomies of bourgeois thought.ā€9 In this book, I use the critique of reiļ¬cation to critique formalistic theory in the neoliberal context, arguing that formalism renders theory symptomatic rather than critical of neoliberalism. Moreover, I use the critique of reiļ¬cation against itself, to argue that dereiļ¬cation depends upon forms of theory that critique cognitivism by working at the aļ¬€ective, sensate, and experiential registers of critique.


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PART 1: NEOLIBERAL SYMPTOMS IN CONTEMPORARY THEORY Chapter 1 explores debates between neo-Marxists and post-Marxist radical democrats as an important feature of the ideological structure of neoliberal societies. The impasse created between economics and politics in debates between neo-Marxists and radical democrats is a symptom of the ambivalent relationship between the neoliberal state and the economy.10 Yet, by separating the economic and the political, these inļ¬‚uential theories neglect a crucial feature of neoliberal domination, what, following Michel Foucault, I call the ā€œneoliberal inversion of liberalism.ā€ Neoliberalism has inverted the liberal relationship between the state and the economy. The neoliberal state takes a strong role in the economy, yet manipulates the economy from a remove, through economic policies that obscure the unequal distributional consequences of its policies in the context of low growth. By contrast, liberal governmental rationality entails a laissez-faire relationship between the state and the economy. Yet, I argue that although neoliberalism entails an inversion in the relationship between the state and the economy, neoliberalism continues to legitimate itself using liberal frameworks. Thus the neoliberal state is able to take an ambivalent stance in relation to the economy, on the one hand emphasizing liberal principles when it chooses to roll back from social welfare functions, on the other hand taking a strong role in the economy when banks that are too big to fail must be bailed out. This ambivalence is important for political theorists to understand, precisely because it resigniļ¬es approaches in contemporary political theory that have emphasized the autonomy of the political from the economy. Such approaches unintentionally legitimate neoliberal forms of domination in the context of the neoliberal inversion of liberalism. Likewise, neo-Marxist approaches that emphasize the heteronomy of the political, and its subordination to the economy, are similarly unable to account for the interrelationship between the economy and the political in the context of neoliberalism. Chapter 1 deepens the account of neoliberal symptoms in contemporary theory by turning to critical theorist Axel Honnethā€™s recent works on capitalism, Reiļ¬cation: A New Look at an Old Idea and Freedomā€™s Right. In particular, Reiļ¬cation on ļ¬rst glance appears to provide a


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promising avenue into a concept that could focus on the interrelationships between economics and politics by reconstructing the concept of reiļ¬cation. Yet Honnethā€™s approach, which theorizes reiļ¬cation as the ā€œforgetting of recognition,ā€ reinterprets the critique of reiļ¬cation as a normative critique that is separated from its political economic dimensions. Similarly, Freedomā€™s Right ultimately reduces the economic order of capitalism to its normative order. In both cases, Honnethā€™s approach fetishizes intersubjectivity by relying upon a notion of intersubjectivity that is constitutively insulated from neoliberalism for the validity of its critique. Honneth fails to appreciate the ways in which the neoliberal construction of homo oeconomicus entails a resigniļ¬cation of normativity in neoliberal society. The hyperresponsible, entrepreneurial neoliberal subject who must assume the burden of risk that the state no longer shoulders faces neoliberal domination in the form of an ethicized capitalism.11 Honnethā€™s approach to neoliberalism, due to a puriļ¬ed and formalistic concept of intersubjectivity, does not go far enough in appreciating the ways in which neoliberalism resigniļ¬es forms of critique in the contemporary context.

PART 2: REIFICATION AND NEOLIBERALISMā€”MARX, LUKƁCS, AND ADORNO Part 2 of the book is devoted to the conceptual foundations of the concept of reiļ¬cation in the works of Marx, LukĆ”cs, and Adorno. While it is widely acknowledged that the critique of reiļ¬cation has its basis in Marxā€™s work, the recognition of Marx as the grandfather of reiļ¬cation critique is largely due to LukĆ”csā€™s inļ¬‚uential work on reiļ¬cation in the 1920s. While Marx himself only seldom used the term Verdinglichung, the idea itself, which emerged from an articulation of the relationship between the dynamic of the capitalist economy and the sociopolitical and cultural dimensions of capitalism, is arguably the raison dā€™ĆŖtre of Marxā€™s work as a whole. An extensive discussion of Marx is therefore crucial for understanding the critique of reiļ¬cation and is undertaken in chapter 3. Marx pioneered a critique of capitalism that cut to the heart of its social, political and cultural forms of appearance. The discontinuities in


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Marxā€™s workā€”between his ā€œpoliticalā€ and ā€œeconomicā€ writings, between his humanism and his scientism, between the critique of capitalist subjectivity and the critique of its objective mechanismsā€”are well known and often recited. My discussion of Marx in chapter 3 reevaluates takenfor-granted distinctions in the Marxian corpus in order to put his writings to work in understanding the historical speciļ¬city of the capitalist articulations of economics and politics. In this chapter, the so-called epistemological break between the humanist Marx and the scientiļ¬c Marx is bridged by grasping these phases of Marxā€™s work as two essential aspects of the critique of capitalist politics, which, moreover, are central to the critique of neoliberalism. The ļ¬rst aspect, based on Marxā€™s early theory of political alienation and his concept of radical democracy in early political writings such as ā€œThe Critique of Hegelā€™s Philosophy of Right,ā€ ā€œOn the Jewish Question,ā€ and The Economic and Philosophical Manuscripts, is a critique of what I call the ā€œrigidiļ¬cation of political formā€ that takes place in capitalist society. The second aspect, based on Marxā€™s critiques of commodity fetishism and primitive accumulation in Capital, is a critique of the ā€œbracketing of the politicalā€ from the economic that provides the condition of possibility for the capitalist mode of production. Both critiques of capitalist politics refer to forms of depoliticization that take place under capitalism. Together they provide the basis for understanding the concept of reiļ¬cation and its applicability to radical democratic politics. Marx demonstrates the importance of understanding not only the abstract domination inherent in the capitalist mode of production (the bracketing of the political from the economic) but also of imagining new political forms of democracy that look beyond the practical horizons of capitalism (the rigidiļ¬cation of the political). Marx thereby paves the way for an understanding of radical democracy that crosscuts the distinction between the political and the economic. His work, therefore, outlines one crucial aspect of struggles against neoliberal reiļ¬cation: they are struggles against both the rigidiļ¬cation of the political and the bracketing of the political from the economic. Chapter 4 turns to an analysis of one of the most inļ¬‚uential thinkers of reiļ¬cation critique, Gyƶrgy LukĆ”cs. LukĆ”cs, writing in the 1920s, remarkably synthesized the concept of reiļ¬cation on the basis of Marxā€™s later works alone, since many of Marxā€™s early writings were not published until at least a decade later. LukĆ”csā€™s inļ¬‚uential text of


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this period, History and Class Consciousness, rendered explicit what remained largely implicit in Marxā€™s work: the crucial role that subjectivity played in the processes of the capitalist mode of production. According to LukĆ”cs, reiļ¬cation characterizes a disengaged subjective stance speciļ¬c to capitalist society in which individuals come to regard certain aspects of their social world as ahistorical, immutable, and immune to the transformative power of human agency. Reiļ¬cation is a depoliticizing form of consciousness that misrecognizes the practical basis of the individualā€™s own activity and its role in constituting the social world. Far from merely describing the activity of industrial labor, LukĆ”cs shows that reiļ¬ed consciousness is a pervasive form of capitalist subjectivity and stands as one of the most fundamental hindrances to the realization of human autonomy in capitalist societies. Signiļ¬cantly, the positive contribution that emerges from LukĆ”csā€™s critique is the idea of dereifying practice as an aspiration of democratic politics. I identify two criteria of dereiļ¬ed practice that emerge from LukĆ”csā€™s discussion: dereiļ¬ed practice connects particular struggles with the social totality of neoliberalism, and it criticizes the formalism and perceptual dissociation that capitalism generates. I suggest that LukĆ”csā€™s critique of reiļ¬cation, while fundamental, does not fully deliver on the potential of a political economy of the senses, largely because his emphasis on self-reļ¬‚exivity as the means for overcoming reiļ¬cation is articulated as a cognitive form of selfreļ¬‚exivity. Yet, in the context of the plurality, fragmentation, and normative ambivalence of neoliberal subjectivity, LukĆ”csā€™s emphasis on self-reļ¬‚exivity retains too great a commitment to a uniļ¬ed class subject whose interests can follow largely from the structure of capital itself. It is precisely because the neoliberal subject cannot be viewed through the paradigm of a uniļ¬ed class subject (i.e., the proletariat) that the project of self-reļ¬‚exivity becomes particularly problematic in neoliberalism. The structure of neoliberal capitalism creates disjunctions between class position and economic interest as well as between class and other markers of social diļ¬€erence such as race and gender.12 As such, neoliberalism generates forms of political ambivalence that render the paradigm of self-reļ¬‚exivity inadequate to generating critical consciousness in the neoliberal context. In the context of neoliberalism, more complex strategies of critique will be necessary for dealing


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with the paradoxical and conļ¬‚icting interests, desires, and perceptions of neoliberal political subjects living in postindustrial contexts. Strategies of critique that are adequate to the nature of neoliberal subjectivity require attunement to the ways in which embodiment, aļ¬€ect, sensation, and desire play into individualā€™s experiences of the forms of both hope and domination, security and precarity that individuals face in neoliberal society. For this more embodied approach to critique, I turn in chapter 5 to Adornoā€™s theory of reiļ¬cation, particularly in the ļ¬eld of aesthetics. Chapter 5 explores Adornoā€™s critique of the LukĆ”scian emphasis on totality, reļ¬‚exivity, and praxis in his critique of reiļ¬cation. Adorno shifts the proper sphere of reiļ¬cation critique toward the concept of experience. In his works Negative Dialectics and Aesthetic Theory, Adorno emphasizes philosophy and aesthetic experience as sites in which the reversal of reiļ¬cation into dereifed experience can take place. Social reiļ¬cation, however, which was the focus of LukĆ”csā€™s theory, is treated pessimistically in his hands, particularly in Adorno and Horkheimerā€™s work Dialectic of Enlightenment, due to Adornoā€™s radical critique of the degeneration of praxis in modernity. While he moves past LukĆ”csā€™s cognitivism, as well as his commitments to a unitary class subject, Adornoā€™s alternative concept of reiļ¬cation turns away from the task of political transformation, a theoretical decision that will have vast implications for how subsequent generations of the Frankfurt School understand the aims of critical theory and the use of reiļ¬cation as a concept. Yet, perhaps despite himself, his Aesthetic Theory provides one crucial strategy for dereiļ¬ed praxis, the notion of the ā€œdefetishizing fetish,ā€ an artwork that acts as a kind of Trojan horse, a homeopathic assault upon forms of domination in neoliberal society.13 Through the concept of ā€œlike cures like,ā€ the defetishizing fetish accesses, on a sensate, embodied level, the conļ¬‚icting forms of attachment, commitment, and desire that characterize neoliberal subjectivity.

PART 3: FROM THEORY TO PRAXIS In chapter 6 I look at artworks that make use of the strategy of the defetishizing fetish in ways that move the critique of reiļ¬cation from theory


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to praxis. I discuss contemporary works by Oliver Ressler, Zanny Begg, Claire Fontaine, Jason Lazarus, and Mika Rottenberg. These works engage the tensions and contradictions of structures of neoliberal capitalism at the subjective, perceptual level through strategies of distantiation and defamiliarization, structurally positioning the subject in uncomfortable or even impossible locations of desire, practical orientation, and observation. The result is an experiential critique of capital that goes beyond the merely cognitive critique of reiļ¬cation oļ¬€ered by the classic critics of capitalist reiļ¬cation discussed earlier. Finally, chapter 7 explores recent forms of neoliberal protest that have emerged in response to the economic crisis in the United States and Europe. This chapter focuses on the Occupy Wall Street movements and highlights how their practices, including occupation of public/private spaces, protest of multinational banks and corporations, work on debt relief, and actions against home foreclosures, perform translations between the abstract logics of capital and political experience and thus render the economy a site of political struggle in a way that bridges the impasse between economics and politics in contemporary theory. This ļ¬nal chapter focuses on the ways in which political protest, like the aesthetic forms described in chapter 6, involves the subjective inhabitation of a space of ambivalence and incommensurability between conļ¬‚icting normative commitments, practical commitments, and desires. The practices described in chapter 7 do not deny this ambivalence, which is inherent to neoliberal political subjectivity, but politicize and embrace it.


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