ABSTRACT

This volume offers insights into ongoing global socioeconomic transformations by directing attention to the significance of labour, work, craft, community, social institutions, social movements and emergent subjectivities in different parts of the world. This is in contrast to theories that project globalisation as a process driven exclusively by global capital and technology, a scheme in which some parts of the world forever will be ‘peripheries’ supplying labour and natural resources, the lives and work of those people purged of originality, meaning and value by the very construct that describes them. Together the chapters in the book present a nonessentialist and non-linear reading of global transformations by examining the relations and adaptations between economy, polity and society, which remains a fundamentally unresolved question in the social sciences.

Combining a wealth of conceptual and empirical investigations, this book will be of interest to scholars and researchers of sociology, globalisation studies, anthropology, economics, development studies and area studies.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

Global capital and social difference: beyond dialectics and embeddedness

part 1|41 pages

Social change and temporality

chapter 1|20 pages

Capital, time and difference

Modernity and the European episteme

chapter 2|19 pages

Capital (in)difference in Africa

The examples of Nigeria and South Africa 1

part 2|52 pages

Capital, class and community

chapter 4|16 pages

Capital, as if community matters

Silk handloom sari production and the defence of hereditary privilege in South India 1

chapter 5|18 pages

Dynamics of capital and local contexts

Understanding Patidar resistance in Gujarat

part 3|43 pages

Institutions and movements

chapter 6|21 pages

Neo-extractivism, developmental models and capital formation

Substitutive natural resource governance in South America

chapter 7|20 pages

Women’s labour, patriarchy, and feminism in twenty-first–century Kerala

Reflections on the glocal present

part 4|36 pages

State, citizenship and the global connection

chapter 8|16 pages

Unequal and gendered

Notes on the coloniality of citizenship 1

chapter 9|18 pages

Particular universalities

Imagining the nation at its borders

part 5|36 pages

Media, borders and emergent subjects

chapter 10|17 pages

Are we all pirates?

Film and TV distribution on the Internet

chapter 11|17 pages

Listening global

Sonic texts, technologies and the new listening subjects