Part 2: The Journey: Theorising Transition and Resistance
Chapter Four: Understanding Intercultural Experience: Super-Diversity, Social Learning and Cultural Trends Toward Transition, Estevao Bosco
Chapter Five: Regaining the Future: The Temporal Complexity of Transitional Politics, Onur Acaroglu
Chapter Six: Socialist transition through a Sacred Entanglement with the Earth: Transforming States of Exception into Revolutionary Fervour, Arnab Chakraborty
Part 3: Classes, Collectives, Groupings: Transition and Subjectivity
Chapter Seven: ‘The masses will rise again’: Rosa Luxemburg, the concept of the masses and the question of non-revolutionary working class, Dana Mills
Chapter Eight: Glimpsing the future in neoliberal subjectivities:‘Self-optimisation’ as a resource for transition, Will Leggett
Chapter Nine: Acephalic Resistance: Evaluating the Contemporaneity of ‘New’ Social Movements through the case of ‘the Yellow Vests’, Denis Chevalier-Bousseau
Part 4: Transition through the Institutions
Chapter Ten: Neoliberalism’s Material and Ideological Profit from Incarceration: A Call for Abolition, Anna Wimbledon
Chapter Eleven: Desire beyond Market Forces: Queerness in India after the removal of Article 377, Anup Sharma
Chapter Twelve: Films as Cognitive Machines: A Discussion through the Apparatus Theory, Ufuk Gürbüzdal
Chapter Thirteen: Hippocrates Pronounced Dead: Breaking Down Neoliberal Complacency in Healthcare, Ozan Siso
Conclusion by co-editor Onur Acaroglu
Neal Harris is a Lecturer in Sociology at Oxford Brookes University, UK.
Onur Acaroğlu is an Instructor at Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey, and a co-founder of the Free University of London (FUL), UK.
“The volume offers an interesting range of perspectives on future possibilities beyond the present and the aftermath of neoliberalism. It is of interest to students, academics, and activists concerned with radical social and political transformation in contemporary societies.”
–Gerard Delanty, Professor of Sociology and Professor of Social and Political Thought, University of Sussex, UK
“This collection convenes contributions aiming to analyse, fight, and overcome the most threatening danger for humankind and democracy today: neoliberalism. The contributors make clear that there are arenas of struggle and resistance, spaces of hope, and actors invested in an emancipatory trajectory against the neoliberal processes of marketisation and commodification that leave the world in the hands of racketeers who are responsible for the unimaginable wealth of the few, and the extreme poverty of the many.”
–Heinz Sünker, Rudolf-Carnap-Senior-Research-Professor, Bergische Universität of Wuppertal, Germany
“Thinking Beyond Neoliberalism is an excellent volume that moves us beyond the dogmatic confines of neoliberalism to imagine possibilities for transition. The interdisciplinary tone and the fearless attempt to engage with the big questions of our time makes this book essential reading for anyone interested in building a better world.”
–Susanne Soederberg, Professor of Global Development Studies, Queen’s University, Canada
This book brings together leading academics and activists to address the possibilities for qualitative social change beyond neoliberalism, providing introductory essays on alternative societies, transition, and resistance. Bringing together discussions on universal basic income, actually existing communism, parecon, circular economies, workers co-operatives, ‘fully automated luxury communism,' trade unionism, and party politics, the volume provides one of the first scholarly interventions to systematically evaluate possibilities for transition and resistance across theoretical, political, and disciplinary traditions.
Neal Harris is a Lecturer in Sociology at Oxford Brookes University, UK.
Onur Acaroğlu is an Instructor at Bilkent University, Ankara, Turkey, and a co-founder of the Free University of London (FUL), UK.