On culturally conservative critics of capitalism.
Neoliberalism’s fragmentary and atomising tendencies have gone too far. In response, some right-wingers have turned against the market. At the same time, there’s a (marginal) tendency on the left turning against cultural liberalism. Are we witnessing a major political realignment underway? What is the substance of these "culturally conservative" critiques, and do they offer anything new, beyond what people like Christopher Lasch advanced decades ago?
Readings:
/62/ Media Shitness ft. Amber A’Lee Frost
/61/ Making Plans for Naija ft. Sa'eed Husaini
/60/ Party Time, Online ft. Paolo Gerbaudo
/59/ Übermenschen of Capital Pt. 3 ft. Leigh Phillips & Michal Rozworski
/58/ Übermenschen of Capital Pt. 2 ft. Ishay Landa
/57/ Übermenschen of Capital Pt. 1 ft. Alex Gourevitch
/56/ Popular Not Populist ft. Anton Jäger
/55/ High-Visibility Revolt ft. Aurélie Dianara
/54/ Numbers Are Too Powerful ft. William Davies
/53/ Brexit's Hotel California
/52/ Duterte's Despotism ft. Nicole Curato
/51/ Oh, Brazil: What Now?
/50/ On The Market ft. Anna Khachiyan
/49/ Kids & Confessions ft. Amber A'Lee Frost
/48/ Ultra-Politics in Brazil ft. Sabrina Fernandes
/47/ Woke Consumerism
/46/ Exiting Capitalist Realism
/45/ Liberalism: A Counter-Podcast
/44/ Neoliberal Order Breakdown Syndrome (N.O.B.S.)
/43/ City Struggles ft. Ben Bradlow / David Adler
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