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Beyond the biopolitics of disposability:...
Journal article

Beyond the biopolitics of disposability: rethinking neoliberalism in the New Gilded Age

Abstract

Under the current reign of neoliberalism, the US has entered a New Gilded Age, more savage and anti-democratic than its predecessor. The current form of market fundamentalism demands a new set of conceptual and analytical tools that engage neoliberalism not only through an economic optic but also as a mode of rationality, governmentality, and public pedagogy. The essay develops a biopolitics of neoliberalism, exploring how it uses market values as a template for realigning corporate power and the state, but also how it produces modes of consent vital to the construction of a neoliberal subject and a more ruthless politics of disposability. Within this new form of neoliberal rationality and biopolitics – a political system actively involved in the management of the politics of life and death – new modes of individual and collective suffering emerge around the modalities and intersection of race and class.

Authors

Giroux HA

Journal

Social Identities, Vol. 14, No. 5, pp. 587–620

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

September 1, 2008

DOI

10.1080/13504630802343432

ISSN

1350-4630

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