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Art sociologist Pascal Gielen defends the hypothesis that global art scene is an ideal production entity for economic exploitation. These days the workethic of the art world with its ever-present young dynamic, flexible working hours, thematic approach, short-term contracts or lack of contracts and its unlimited energetic freedom is capitalized within the cultural industry and has been converted into a standard production model. In the glow of the creative cities and the creative industry governmetns embrace this post-Henry Ford work model and seamlessly link it to the globally-dominant neo-liberal market economy.
Kunstsocioloog Pascal Gielen verdedigt de hypothese dat de geglobaliseerde kunstwereld een ideaal terrein voor economische uitbuiting is. In de roes van de creative cities en de creatieve industrie omarmen overheden dit postfordistische werkmodel en sluiten zo naadloos aan bij de mondiale, neoliberale markteconomie. Gielen diept deze situatie uit en wil tegelijkertijd nieuwe alternatieven aanreiken, die de kunstwereld nodig heeft om haar eigen dynamiek en vrijheid te bewaren. Zijn zoektocht leidt hem naar plaatsen van gedeelde intimiteit en ‘slowability’ temidden van de hectische, globale flow van artistieke ontwikkelingen en trends. Deze derde editie is geheel herzien en bijgewerkt met Gielens meest recente inzichten in de politieke dimensies van kunst, autonomie en de relatie tussen kunst, ethiek en democratie.
From the fast-food industry to the sharing economy, precarious work has become the norm in contemporary capitalism, like the anti-globalization movement predicted it would. This book describes how the precariat came into being under neoliberalism and how it has radicalized in response to crisis and austerity. It investigates the political economy of precarity and the historical sociology of the precariat, and discusses movements of precarious youth against oligopoly and oligarchy in Europe, America, and East Asia. Foti covers the three fundamental dates of recent history: the financial crisis of 2008, the political revolutions of 2011, and the national-populist backlash of 2016, to present his class theory of the precariat and the ideology of left-populist movements. Building a theory of capitalist crisis to understand the aftermath of the Great Recession, he outlines political scenarios where the precariat can successfully fight for emancipation, and reverse inequality and environmental destruction. Written by the activist who put precarity on the map of radical thinking, this is the first work proposing a complete theory of the precariat in its actuality and potentiality.
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