The More-Than-Human Life of Capitalism: Assemblages, Affects and the Neoliberal Black Hole

IF 1.7 Q2 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Nick J. Fox
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Abstract

This paper applies a more-than-human, relational, new materialist ontology to ask the Deleuzian question: what does capitalism actually do? The transactions identified in Marx’s Capital are re-analysed as more-than-human assemblages, constituted by affective flows involving both human and non-human matter. The paper then identifies further more-than-human affects that produce the fluctuations in prices and quantities of goods sold, described in classical economics as the ‘laws of supply and demand’. Analysis reveals these affects to be associated with the affective and relational capacities of commodities. The consequences of this more-than-human ontology of capitalism are explored by means of a short case study of the digital economy. This demonstrates how more-than-human affects are responsible for many of the negative consequences of a capitalist economy, including uncertainty, waste and social inequalities. The paper suggests that capitalism is progressively becoming a ‘black hole’ from which neither workers nor capitalist enterprises can escape, and draws conclusions that diverge radically from both neoliberal and Marxist analyses of capitalism.
资本主义的非人生活:集合、情感与新自由主义黑洞
本文运用一种超人类的、关系性的新唯物主义本体论来提出德勒兹的问题:资本主义究竟在做什么?马克思《资本论》中确定的交易被重新分析为超人类的组合,由涉及人类和非人类物质的情感流构成。然后,本文进一步确定了产生价格和销售数量波动的超人类情感,古典经济学将其描述为 "供求法则"。分析表明,这些影响与商品的情感和关系能力有关。通过对数字经济的简短案例研究,我们探讨了资本主义这种超人类本体论的后果。这表明,超人类情感是如何造成资本主义经济的许多负面影响的,包括不确定性、浪费和社会不平等。论文认为,资本主义正逐渐成为一个 "黑洞",工人和资本主义企业都无法从中逃脱,并得出了与新自由主义和马克思主义对资本主义的分析截然不同的结论。
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来源期刊
Social Sciences
Social Sciences Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
5.90%
发文量
494
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: Social Sciences (ISSN 2076-0760) is an international, peer-reviewed, quick-refereeing open access journal published online monthly by MDPI. The journal seeks to appeal to an interdisciplinary audience and authorship which focuses upon real world research. It attracts papers from a wide range of fields, including anthropology, criminology, geography, history, political science, psychology, social policy, social work, sociology, and more. With its efficient and qualified double-blind peer review process, Social Sciences aims to present the newest relevant and emerging scholarship in the field to both academia and the broader public alike, thereby maintaining its place as a dynamic platform for engaging in social sciences research and academic debate. Subject Areas: Anthropology, Criminology, Economics, Education, Geography, History, Law, Linguistics, Political science, Psychology, Social policy, Social work, Sociology, Other related areas.
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