Affective Capitalism

Affective Capitalism
Title Affective Capitalism PDF eBook
Author Hangwoo Lee
Publisher Springer Nature
Pages 280
Release 2024-01-27
Genre Political Science
ISBN 9819981743

Download Affective Capitalism Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Drawing on Tarde's and Deleuze’s monadology, this book investigates the affective turn of contemporary capitalism. The concept of affect provides critical insight to overcome the limitations of social constructivism and cognitive capitalism. Affective capitalism transforms the population’s everyday bodily experiences into quantitative metrics that can be observed, measured, and processed on a non-conscious register, turning them into dividuals prepared to react and be affected by specific information at a given moment. In an era where social wealth increasingly relies on the 'social factory,' algorithms and big data constitute the living labor beyond employment. This book argues that affect also holds a potential for dismantling today’s real subsumption of life by capital. The network effect, mostly actualized as a company's market capitalization, is constantly traversed by the molecular becoming of affect, leading to new assemblages, such as free software movement, decentralized platforms, peer-to-peer networking, blockchain, and universal basic income.

Affective Capitalism (Ephemera Vol. 16, No. 4)

Affective Capitalism (Ephemera Vol. 16, No. 4)
Title Affective Capitalism (Ephemera Vol. 16, No. 4) PDF eBook
Author Tero Karppi
Publisher
Pages 236
Release 2016-11-04
Genre
ISBN 9781906948337

Download Affective Capitalism (Ephemera Vol. 16, No. 4) Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Affective Capitalism in Academia

Affective Capitalism in Academia
Title Affective Capitalism in Academia PDF eBook
Author Kristiina Brunila
Publisher Policy Press
Pages 266
Release 2023-01-16
Genre
ISBN 1447357841

Download Affective Capitalism in Academia Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Drawing on affect theory and research on academic capitalism, this book examines the contemporary crisis of universities. Moving through 11 international and comparative case studies, it explores diverse features of contemporary academic life, from the coloniality of academic capitalism to performance management and the experience of being performance-managed. Affect has emerged as a major analytical lens of social research. However, it is rarely applied to universities and their marketisation. Offering a unique exploration of the contemporary role of affect in academic labour and the organisation of scholarship, this book considers modes of subjectivation, professional and personal relationships and organisational structures and their affective charges. Chapter 9 is available Open Access via OAPEN under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.

The Emotional Logic of Capitalism

The Emotional Logic of Capitalism
Title The Emotional Logic of Capitalism PDF eBook
Author Martijn Konings
Publisher Stanford University Press
Pages 185
Release 2015-05-27
Genre Political Science
ISBN 0804794502

Download The Emotional Logic of Capitalism Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

The capitalist market, progressives bemoan, is a cold monster: it disrupts social bonds, erodes emotional attachments, and imposes an abstract utilitarian rationality. But what if such hallowed critiques are completely misleading? This book argues that the production of new sources of faith and enchantment is crucial to the dynamics of the capitalist economy. Distinctively secular patterns of attraction and attachment give modern institutions a binding force that was not available to more traditional forms of rule. Elaborating his alternative approach through an engagement with the semiotics of money and the genealogy of economy, Martijn Konings uncovers capitalism's emotional and theological content in order to understand the paradoxical sources of cohesion and legitimacy that it commands. In developing this perspective, he draws on pragmatist thought to rework and revitalize the Marxist critique of capitalism.

Affective Capitalism in Academia

Affective Capitalism in Academia
Title Affective Capitalism in Academia PDF eBook
Author Daniel Nehring
Publisher Policy Press
Pages 267
Release 2023-01-16
Genre Education
ISBN 1447357868

Download Affective Capitalism in Academia Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Drawing on affect theory and research on academic capitalism, this book examines the contemporary crisis of universities. Moving through 11 international and comparative case studies, it explores diverse features of contemporary academic life, from the coloniality of academic capitalism to performance management and the experience of being performance-managed. Affect has emerged as a major analytical lens of social research. However, it is rarely applied to universities and their marketisation. Offering a unique exploration of the contemporary role of affect in academic labour and the organisation of scholarship, this book considers modes of subjectivation, professional and personal relationships and organisational structures and their affective charges. Chapter 9 is available Open Access via OAPEN under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.

Emotions as Commodities

Emotions as Commodities
Title Emotions as Commodities PDF eBook
Author Eva Illouz
Publisher Routledge
Pages 393
Release 2017-09-28
Genre Business & Economics
ISBN 1351810596

Download Emotions as Commodities Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Capitalism has made rationality into a pervasive feature of human action and yet, far from heralding a loss of emotionality, capitalist culture has been accompanied with an unprecedented intensification of emotional life. This raises the question: how could we have become increasingly rationalized and more intensely emotional? Emotions as Commodities offers a simple hypothesis: that consumer acts and emotional life have become closely and inseparably intertwined with each other, each one defining and enabling the other. Commodities facilitate the experience of emotions, and so emotions are converted into commodities. The contributors of this volume present the co-production of emotions and commodities as a new type of commodity that has gone unseen and unanalyzed by theories of consumption – emodity. Indeed, this innovative book explores how emodity includes atmospherical or mood-producing commodities, relation-marking commodities and mental commodities, all of which the purpose it is to change and improve the self. Analysing a variety of modern day situations such as emotional management through music, creation of urban sexual atmospheres and emotional transformation through psychotherapy, Emotions as Commodities will appeal to scholars, postgraduate students and postdoctoral researchers interested in fields such as Sociology, Cultural Studies, Marketing, Anthropology and Consumer Studies.

Cold Intimacies

Cold Intimacies
Title Cold Intimacies PDF eBook
Author Eva Illouz
Publisher John Wiley & Sons
Pages 118
Release 2013-04-23
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0745658075

Download Cold Intimacies Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

It is commonly assumed that capitalism has created an a-emotional world dominated by bureaucratic rationality; that economic behavior conflicts with intimate, authentic relationships; that the public and private spheres are irremediably opposed to each other; and that true love is opposed to calculation and self-interest. Eva Illouz rejects these conventional ideas and argues that the culture of capitalism has fostered an intensely emotional culture in the workplace, in the family, and in our own relationship to ourselves. She argues that economic relations have become deeply emotional, while close, intimate relationships have become increasingly defined by economic and political models of bargaining, exchange, and equity. This dual process by which emotional and economic relationships come to define and shape each other is called emotional capitalism. Illouz finds evidence of this process of emotional capitalism in various social sites: self-help literature, women's magazines, talk shows, support groups, and the Internet dating sites. How did this happen? What are the social consequences of the current preoccupation with emotions? How did the public sphere become saturated with the exposure of private life? Why does suffering occupy a central place in contemporary identity? How has emotional capitalism transformed our romantic choices and experiences? Building on and revising the intellectual legacy of critical theory, this book addresses these questions and offers a new interpretation of the reasons why the public and the private, the economic and the emotional spheres have become inextricably intertwined.