Following the fallout of the 2008 recession in the Republic of Ireland, its creative economy is framed as a window onto a range of other shifts in contemporary Irish society, including the recent rise of Irish nationalism. This book follows a group of young activists and artists who were facing increasingly precarious housing and labour market and were involved in a range of activist campaigns particularly for reproductive rights and social and affordable housing, critiquing what they referred to as neoliberalism.
Recenzijos
This book is excellent. It is clearly and evocatively written, incisively argued and empirically rich. This is truly an ethnographic tour de force! Matei Candea, University of Cambridge
This book is a fascinating ethnographic account of the ways in which political critique functions in everyday life, rather than only in the pages of academic texts. It makes an innovative and compelling set of arguments and should constitute an important intervention in the literature on political anthropology. Paolo Heywood, Durham University
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Neoliberalism, Critique and the Anthropology of Politics
Part I: The Neoliberal City
Chapter
1. Mapping Neoliberalism
Chapter
2. The Value of the Gift
Part II: Forms of Critique
Chapter
3. Art and the Bricoleur
Chapter
4. Activism and the Engineer
Part III: Creativity and Transformation
Chapter
5. Class, Work and Creativity
Chapter
6. Housing and Irish Nationalism
Conclusion: Critique Refigured
References
Index
Natalie Morningstar is a Lecturer in Human, Social and Political Sciences at Fitzwilliam College and an Affiliated Lecturer at the University of Cambridge. She focuses her research on the link between contemporary political economy, human subjectivity and political movements in the Euro-American region, with a particular emphasis on nationalism and left-wing activism.