Knihobot

Susan Searls Giroux

    I'm Not Like Everybody Else
    Plant Theory
    Fates of the Performative
    Foucault Beyond Foucault
    • Foucault Beyond Foucault

      • 152 stránek
      • 6 hodin čtení
      3,9(28)Ohodnotit

      This book retraces power's intensification in Foucault in ways that both allow us to reread Foucault's own conceptual itinerary and, more importantly, to think about how we might respond to the mutations of power that that have taken place since his death in 1984.

      Foucault Beyond Foucault
    • "A powerful new examination of the performative that asks "what's next?" for this well-worn concept"

      Fates of the Performative
    • Plant Theory

      • 165 stránek
      • 6 hodin čtení

      This book joins the growing philosophical literature on vegetable life to ask what changes in our present humanities debates about biopower and Animal Studies if we take plants as a linchpin for thinking about biopolitics.

      Plant Theory
    • I'm Not Like Everybody Else

      • 144 stránek
      • 6 hodin čtení

      Despite the presence of the Flaming Lips in a commercial for a copier and Iggy Pop’s music in luxury cruise advertisements, Jeffrey T. Nealon argues that popular music has not exactly been co-opted in the American capitalist present. Contemporary neoliberal capitalism has, in fact, found a central organizing use for the values of twentieth-century popular music: being authentic, being your own person, and being free. In short, not being like everybody else. Through a consideration of the shift in dominant modes of power in the American twentieth and twenty-first centuries, from what Michel Foucault calls a dominant “disciplinary” mode of power to a “biopolitical” mode, Nealon argues that the modes of musical “resistance” need to be completely rethought and that a commitment to musical authenticity or meaning—saying “no” to the mainstream—is no longer primarily where we might look for music to function against the grain. Rather, it is in the technological revolutions that allow biopolitical subjects to deploy music within an everyday set of practices (MP3 listening on smartphones and iPods, streaming and downloading on the internet, the background music that plays nearly everywhere) that one might find a kind of ambient or ubiquitous answer to the “attention capitalism” that has come to organize neoliberalism in the American present. In short, Nealon stages the final confrontation between “keepin’ it real” and “sellin’ out.”

      I'm Not Like Everybody Else