ECONOMY (original) (raw)
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Living in the Post-capitalist Age: a kaleidoscopic look towards the future
This essay is an attempt to explore what it might be like to live in a post-capitalist age. Much as men like Seneca in his time agreed that 'things must change' if society is to renew itself, we are faced with the same question today. The essay looks at ways to deal with the socio-economic impasse that now predominates, and how a re-examination of ideas such as 'transhumanism' and 'inhumanism,' as expressed by poets such as Robinson Jeffers, might help us to come to terms with new thought constructs to deal with a post-capitalist condition. Hopefully the essay will stimulate readers into a response that accepts the need to see capitalism itself as a historical moment in the life of peoples.
Circular Flow: On the Global Economy of Inequality. Reader, 2019
The ever-widening gulf between rich and poor, the unequal distribution of wealth now affecting even the middle ground of most European societies, precarious work, rising competitive pressure coupled with shrinking incomes and pensions, privatization and economization of formerly public services, the threats of climate change and environmental pollution, growing numbers of regional wars and war-like distributional conflicts around the world, the return of nationalism and religious fanaticism: faced with all these problems, which divide societies and force millions to become migrants, more and more people, even in the mainstream of society, are now asking questions about the social, ecological, and political consequences of the complex process generally referred to as “globalization.” Circular Flow brings together contributions that reflect on economic principles in the light of the fields of conflict listed above. The project calls into question neither the idea nor the reality of an increasingly networked world, arguing instead for a strengthening of those within society who call for a socially just and ecological shaping of the process. Although this discussion centers on critiques of the capitalist system that has turned the world into a commodity, globalization means far more than just international flows of goods and capital, extending to the mobility of people, ideas, and culture. Content: 5–13 On the Global Economy of Inequality Søren Grammel — 15–24 Inside Versus Outside Stephan Lessenich — 27–59 The Economy Colin Crouch — 67–90 Duty-Free Art Hito Steyerl — 93–115 Working Proposal: 6 Issues about United Food Company Inconstancy of Memories, Rainy Seasons and Post-Development Andreas Siekmann — 121–131 Petrocosmos Bureau d’Études — 139–157 Amazon Worker Cage Simon Denny — 159–171 The Anarchist Banker Jan Peter Hammer — 175–183 Money and Zero: Quantification and Visualization of the Invisible in Early Modern Cultural Techniques Sybille Krämer — 185–195 Europium Lisa Rave — 197–211 The Question of the Economy Felwine Sarr — 60–65, 116–119, 132–137, 172–173 Poems by Alice Creischer
From the Expansion of the Market to the Metamorphosis of Popular Economies*
RCCS Annual Review, 2010
Recognising the existence, in this context of crisis, of widespread dissatisfaction with an economic and social system which is blind to social inequalities, insensitive to the social effects of unbridled competition, and complacent as regards the depredations wrought on nonrenewable resources, this article reflects on the persistence of economic forms differing from the capitalist system, which exist alongside it, as well as on the emergence of social movements and practices of resistance to the logic of this system, as is the case of the solidarity economy. The article goes on to ponder how these forms can serve as a basis for a far-reaching paradigm change, and thus contribute to a fairer system, better equipped to match resources to needs and maximise human and social well-being.
The Thorny Question of Art and Economy.
Dystopian and Utopian Impulses in Art Making: The World We Want, 2023
In this paper we deliberate on some equivocal propositions for artists and the economy. To do this, we first acknowledge the background condition – one that turns this deliberation into a wider exchange – that ‘the Economy’ as we know it has failed, and it is time to discuss alternatives. This discussion takes place against the burning backdrop of climate collapse in the wake of the fourth industrial automation (Chen et al. 2018) and sixth species mass-extinction (Ceballos et al. 2017), in the midst of a global pandemic. Beyond these preliminary observations, it is our contention that artists, blessed and cursed as they are with a rich repertoire of strategies for livelihood and survival, have a prodigious contribution to make to the economy, as marginal yet powerful avatars, for rethinking what business and economics could mean. If we truly consider new forms of collectivity in art making (with peers, friends, proxies, ouijic agents and colleagues) what other fundamentally different habits of trade and economy could be possible? And, if these were here all along, how could we reignite them? Commons; utopianism; anti-capitalism; critical dystopias; migrancy; precarity