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Speculation as a Mode of Production: Forms of Value Subjectivity in Art and Capital: Historical Materialism Book Series, cartea 176

Autor Marina Vishmidt
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 24 oct 2018
In Speculation as a Mode of Production: Forms of Value Subjectivity in Art and Capital, Marina Vishmidt offers a new perspective on one of the main categories of capitalist life in the historical present. Writing not under the shadow but in the spirit of Adorno’s negative dialectic, her work pursues speculation through its contested terrains of philosophy, finance, and art, to arrive at the most detailed analysis that we now possess of the role of speculation in the shaping of subjectivity by value relations. Featuring detailed critical discussions of recent tendencies in the artistic representation of labour, and a brilliant reconstruction of the philosophical concept of the speculative from its origins in German Romanticism, Speculation as a Mode of Production is an essential, widescreen theorisation of capital’s drive to self-expansion, and an urgent corrective to the narrow and one-sided periodisations to which it is most commonly subjected.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004291379
ISBN-10: 9004291377
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Historical Materialism Book Series


Cuprins

PrefaceAcknowledgements
Introduction: Speculation as a Mode of Production in Art and Capital1Introduction2Speculation as Method3How Does Art Speculate?4Is There a Speculative Mode of Production?5Chapter Outline
1 Speculation: The Subjectivity of Re-structuring and Re-structuring Subjectivity1Speculation in the Negative2Speculative Subjects3Fetishism and the Production of Subjectivity4Speculation or Real Subsumption5To Human is Capital6Human Capital and Art7Speculation and Abstract Labour: An Abstract8Self-Appreciation?9From Self to Species-Being10Value Equals Zero
2 Topologies of Speculation: The Tenses of Art, Labour and Finance1‘Counterproductive’ and Abstract Labour2Autonomy in Generalised Speculation3Speculation and Contingency4What is an ‘Absolute Contingency’?5Futures and the Future6Art as Counterproductive Labour7Invisible Labour8Visible Finance9Conclusion
3 Aesthetic Speculations and Antagonisms1Is Art Working?2Real Subsumption3Negative Composition4The Specialist of Non-Specialism5Negate Here6The Critique of the Power of Judgement and the Critique of the Powers of Art: Kantian Interlude
4 Whatever Indicator: Indeterminacy, Judgement, and Putting the Speculative to Work1Introduction2The Name of Art3To Be Done with the Judgement of Art4Counter-Artistic Production5Whatever Indicator6Reproductive Potentiality7Subhuman Capital8Artist Placement Group – Incidental Person, or Negation of the Artist?9Excursus on Use-Value10Artistic Communism – A Speculative Gesture11Art – Departure or Destination?
Conclusion: Whither Speculation?1One More Time If You Would Be Useless2Trajectories of the Generic3Prognostic Coda
BibliographyIndex

Recenzii

'Breaking with the boosterism and banality that so often accompany discussions of art and capital, Marina Vishmidt brings an impressive command over contemporary debates and a truly dialectical sensitivity to bear on the transformations that artistic practice has undergone in our speculative times.'
-- Alberto Toscano, Reader in Critical Theory, co-author of Cartographies of the Absolute

'An astonishingly lucid account of the way in which neoliberalism operates, inscribing the logic of a barely mediated labour-capital relationship into the intimate recesses of subject formation.'
-- Jaleh Mansoor, Associate Professor of Art History, The University of British Columbia

Notă biografică

Marina Vishmidt is a writer and editor. She teaches at Goldsmiths, University of London, and is the co-author of Reproducing Autonomy (with Kerstin Stakemeier) (Mute, 2016).