ABSTRACT

Does contemporary anti-capitalism tend towards, as Slavoj Žižek believes, nihilism, or does it tend towards, as Michael Hardt and Antonio Negri believe, true egalitarian freedom?

Within The Cultural Contradictions of Anti-Capitalism, Fletcher presents an answer that manages to tend towards both simultaneously. In entering into contemporary debates on radicalism, this innovative volume proposes a revised conception of Hardt and Negri’s philosophy of emancipatory desire. Indeed, Fletcher reassesses Hardt and Negri’s history of Western radicalism and challenges their notion of an alter-modernity break from bourgeois modernity. In addition to this, this title proposes the idea of Western anti-capitalism as a spirit within a spirit, exploring how anti-capitalist movements in the West pose a genuine challenge to the capitalist order while remaining dependent on liberalist assumptions about the emancipatory individual.

Inspired by post-structuralism and rejecting both revolutionary transcendence and notions of an underlying desiring purity, The Cultural Contradictions of Anti-Capitalism offers new insight into how liberal capitalist society persistently produces its own forms of resistance against itself. This book will appeal to graduate and postgraduate students interested in fields such as: Sociology, Politics, International Relations, Cultural Studies, History, and Philosophy.

chapter |25 pages

Introduction

Overview and key theoretical argument

chapter 1|19 pages

Perspectives on contemporary radicalism

Transcendence and the immanentist break

chapter 2|20 pages

A short history of bourgeois self-emancipation

From Spinoza to Locke and onwards

chapter 3|18 pages

May 1968

Towards the limits of self-emancipatory radicalism

chapter 4|20 pages

Varieties of self-emancipatory experience

French and Anglo-Saxon cultures of self-emancipation

chapter 5|18 pages

Deleuze and Guattari

Self-emancipatory philosophy in the ’68 era

chapter 6|18 pages

Hardt and Negri on postmodernisation

Self-emancipatory radicalism in the politics of the multitude

chapter 7|20 pages

Flexible re-institutionalisation

From revolutionary anti-capitalism to transnationalist alter-globalism