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A Political Economy of the Senses
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13 October 2015

— John Bellamy Foster, editor of the Monthly Review and author of Marx's Ecology
Neoliberalism is one of the most potent phenomena of our time and one of the most strangely resistant to critique. Anita Chari takes a provocative approach in A Political Economy of the Senses, expanding our palette of critical resources with important insights about aesthetics and reification. This is a timely, creative book about some of the most urgent problems of our day.
— Kevin Olson, University of California, Irvine
A Political Economy of the Senses is a brilliantly conceptualized and ambitious project. This captivating work is written with an acute sense of authorship and even a sense of mission. It articulates an experiential critique of capital, which is a noble and much needed intellectual endeavor, striking at the heart of our current predicament. Anita Chari achieves her goal with merciless, yet gracious, intellectual resolve.
— Albena Azmanova, University of Kent
Anita Chari understands we are all performers, and the performance of critique needs new vantage points for observing and more sensitivity to embodied critique all around us. Her text aims to deconstruct the theoretical carousel. We are left with important questions: how can we materialize critique? How can we start to recognize this materialization when it is happening right in front of us? Can we all agree there is more to consider before we perform our knowledge? The risk if we don't is our inability to conceive of a transformative moment.
— Jason Lazarus, University of South Florida
Recommended.
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Toward the Materialization of Critique
Part I. Neoliberal Symptoms
1. Neoliberal Symptoms: The Impasse Between Economics and Politics in Contemporary Political Theory
2. Neoliberalism and Normative Ambivalence: Third-Generation Critical Theory and the Fetish of Intersubjectivity
Part II. The Critique of Reification
3. Alienation and Depoliticization: Rejoining Radical Democracy with the Critique of Capitalism
4. Lukács's Turn to a Political Economy of the Senses
5. The Reversibility of Reification: Adorno from the Aesthetic to the Social
Part III. A Political Economy of the Senses
6. Defetishizing Fetishes: Art and the Critique of Capital in Neoliberal Society
7. Occupy Wall Street: Challenging Neoliberal Reification
Notes
Bibliography
Index