1st Edition

Capitalism, Citizenship and the Arts of Thinking A Marxian-Aristotelian Linguistic Account

By Kathryn Dean Copyright 2014
256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

Capitalism, Citizenship and the Arts of Thinking proposes a historical materialist ethic of human flourishing understood in terms of the practice of citizenship. It focuses on the ways in which capitalism’s necessary mode of thinking – analytical thinking – impedes the nurturing of capabilities for citizenship as understood from a Marxian-Aristotelian point of view. It includes a systematic... Read more
Introduction  Part I. The Materialities of Thinking  1. Citizenship, Thinking and the Education of the Senses  2. Towards a Marxian-Aristotelian Science of Thinking  3. Thinking and Language Modalities  Part II.  Alienation, Textualisation and the Capitalist Divisions of Labour  4. Writing and the Institution of a Textualised World  5. Alienation and the Capitalist Divisions of Labour  6. Thinking in an Informatised World  Part III. From Fordism to post-Fordism, or, The Transcendence of Alienation?  7. Print and the Constitution of a ‘People’  8. From Nationality to Planetarity: From ‘People’ to ‘Multitude’?  

Biography

Dr Katherine Dean is a Research Associate at the University of London, UK.

"This is a book which is an unalloyed and brave examination of what the capitalist appropriation of human endeavour and skills, most particularly through the delineation of modes of thinking, writing and representation, has done to constrict human freedom within our given nature while over-endowing our capacities to fetishize and to abstract our lives for the ends of consumption. It is a worthy corrective to a concentration on labour theories of value which have proven unable to strengthen ‘the left’ while neo-liberal capital has been rampant."— Gordon Peters, Journal of Critical Realism