Neoliberal and militarised post-politics : four social regimes, four affects and radical politics today

This dissertation theorises the depoliticised conditions of late capitalism through what I call a 'neoliberal and militarised post-politics'. It argues that ours is a neoliberal and militarised post-political society that cannot imagine disruptive revolutionary events. The dissertation add...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Taskale, Ali Riza
Other Authors: Olund, Eric ; Dubow, Jessica
Published: University of Sheffield 2013
Subjects:
320
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.577398
Description
Summary:This dissertation theorises the depoliticised conditions of late capitalism through what I call a 'neoliberal and militarised post-politics'. It argues that ours is a neoliberal and militarised post-political society that cannot imagine disruptive revolutionary events. The dissertation addresses key debates on governmental social regimes of neoliberal post-politics, the inseparability of neoliberalism and war/militarism, and the historical/geographical unevenness of global capitalism. In so doing, it offers an original topological analysis that makes the following critical interventions: an exploration of how the much-discussed social regimes of sovereignty, discipline and control relate to each other in the production of neoliberal governmentality; an analysis of the affective logic each regime entails and how they inter-relate; a proposal for a fourth regime, 'terrorism', and a theorisation of its associated affect, 'spite'. Finally, radical critique as divine violence is set against neoliberal and militarised post-politics.