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OverviewIn a world of declining wages, working conditions, and instability, the response for many has been to work harder, increasing hours and finding various ways to hustle in a gig economy. What drives our attachment to work? To paraphrase a question from Spinoza, ""Why do people fight for their exploitation as if it was liberation?"" The Double Shift turns towards the intersection of Marx and Spinoza in order to examine the nature of our affective, ideological, and strategic attachment to work. Through an examination of contemporary capitalism and popular culture it argues that the current moment can be defined as one of ""negative solidarity."" The hardship and difficulty of work is seen not as the basis for alienation and calls for its transformation but rather an identification with the difficulties and hardships of work. This distortion of the work ethic leads to a celebration of capitalists as job creators and suspicion towards anyone who is not seen as a ""real worker."" The Double Shift argues for a transformation of our collective imagination and attachment to work. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Jason ReadPublisher: Verso Books Imprint: Verso Books Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.600kg ISBN: 9781839767623ISBN 10: 1839767626 Pages: 224 Publication Date: 12 March 2024 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"Drawing on Marx, Spinoza, and popular film, Jason Read builds an illuminating analysis that not only astutely captures, but also helps to make sense of, our double experience of wage work as a locus of freedom and compulsion, hope and fear, self-actualization and self-impoverishment, love and hate. This book is a must read for students of contemporary capitalism. -- Kathi Weeks, Duke University Jason Read's wonderful book constructs an engaging dialogue between Marx and Spinoza that shines a new light on pressing contemporary issues of politics and work. -- Michael Hardt, Duke University, author of <i>The Subversive Seventies</i> With The Double Shift, Jason Read cuts trenchantly into the knot of entangled alienations that attach us to outdated perceptions of economics, ethics and politics. This impressive synthesis of the reinvention of a Spinozan Marx by current French and Italian theorists joyfully enrolls recent films and TV series into a critical analysis of the ""negative solidarity"" which fuels the rise of right-wing politics. As late-capitalist societies are eaten away, from the inside, by widely shared but deeply misleading perceptions of work and waged labor, this is indeed a most urgent Read! -- Yves Citton; author of <i>Mediarchy</i> and <i>The Ecology of Attention</i>" Praise for The Politics of Transindividuality * : * I must, of course, reserve a special place for Jason Read's [2016] book, The Politics of Transindividuality, not only because he does me the honour of devoting an entire treatment to my 'theses', but because he puts together a magisterial appropriation of the problematic of the transindividual, marshalling a whole set of classical and contemporary references (except for Freud, who is the relevant index of a divergence between us) to construct a great 'transformation of philosophy' with a view to the 'transformation of the world. -- Etienne Balibar In The Politics of Transindividuality , Jason Read accomplishes two equally important tasks. On the one hand, he gives a mapping of the discourse on individuation and transindividuality in modern and contemporary thought; on the other, he problematizes the concept of transindividuality itself in view of its usefulness for future politics. In this latter sense, Read's own elaboration and remarks on important philosophical and political issues, such as his discussion of the relation between determination and liberation, give the book its philosophical and political direction and depth. -- Bruno Gulli * Situations * As Jason Read has clearly explained: in the authors he analyses, the category of the transindividual is not a simple alternative to intersubjectivity, but rather the category capable of explaining the material fabric from which the category of intersubjectivity emerges and affirms itself.n other words, transindividuality helps to explain intersubjectivity not as a constitutive place of the social bond, but as its imaginary or ideological effect. -- Vittorio Morfino Although Read did not himself create the concept of transindividuality, he has probably done more than any other contemporary philosopher to develop this concept by exploring its history and emphasizing its applications especially as an instantiation of what, following Louis Althusser, we could call a concept for Marxism. Indeed Read's book is a venture into Transmarxism, that is both a way of opening up Marxism in order to communicate with other philosophical and political traditions and also of summoning non-Marxist traditions to encounter the conceptual richness of Marxism at its critical best. -- Ted Stolze * Human Studies * Praise for The Micro-Politics of Capital * : * Jason Read's book contains the most original and incisive readings of Marx's texts that I have read in years, along with equally penetrating analyses of Althusser, Foucault, Deleuze, and Guattari. He demonstrates beautifully along the way that French poststructuralism is not opposed to Marxism, but that the two are in fact intimately related in their theories of the production of subjectivity. The book helps reorient our understandings of both Marxism and poststructuralism. -- Michael Hardt This book represents a thoughtful reconsideration of Marx's notion of the mode of production and does so in a way that is likely to appeal to a new and younger readership by showing that mode of production is not simply an economic concept but one that can explain the forms of subjectivity peculiar to different kinds of social organization. The theoretical framework of the book is refreshingly broad; the author draws from a number of theoretical and philosophical schools and cannot easily be categorized as 'Deleuzean' or 'Althusserian.' This represents the perspective of a generation no longer constrained by the notion of opposing theoretical camps so prevalent in the 1980s and 90s. -- Warren Montag Author InformationJason Read is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Southern Maine. He is the author of The Politics of Transindividuality (Haymarket 2017) and The Production of Subjectivity: Marx and Philosophy (Brill 2022). He blogs about philosophy, politics, and culture at unemployednegativity.com. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |