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  1. Listening to Black lives matter: racial capitalism and the critique of neoliberalism.Siddhant Issar - 2021 - Contemporary Political Theory 20 (1):48-71.
    This article explores left critiques of neoliberalism in light of the Black Lives Matter movement’s recourse to the notion of ‘racial capitalism’ in their analyses of anti-Black oppression. Taking a cue from BLM, I argue for a critical theory of racial capitalism that historicizes neoliberalism within a longue durée framework, surfacing racialized continuities in capitalism’s violence. I begin by revealing how neo-Marxist and neo-Foucaultian approaches to neoliberalism, particularly that of David Harvey and Wendy Brown, respectively, partition race from the workings (...)
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  • The politics of flight refugee movements between radical democracy and autonomous exodus.Johannes Siegmund - forthcoming - Constellations.
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  • Ecology, labor, politics: Violence in Arendt’s Vita Activa.Dawn Herrera - 2023 - Contemporary Political Theory 22 (4):460-482.
    Hannah Arendt famously argued that acts of violence are corrosive to a free and plural politics. However, the broader implications of her critique of violence are less well known. Reading her concept of violence comprehensively, with regard to (ostensibly non-political) labor and work as well as action, this article reveals its broader relevance for contemporary political thought: the political question of violence lies at the heart of our ecological crisis and is crucial for the social structure of labor domination. While (...)
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  • Not Subjects of the Market, but Subject to the Market: Capitalist Slavery as Expropriation.Michael Gorup - forthcoming - Political Theory.
    This essay draws political theory into dialogue with recent work in economic history and the history of capitalism to develop an account of the unique injustice produced by capitalist slavery in the antebellum United States. Prevailing approaches to thinking about slavery in political theory tend to disembed it from its broader socioeconomic context, which has led theorists to overlook some of the distinctive horrors associated with capitalist slavery in particular. In response, I develop a theory of capitalist slavery as expropriation, (...)
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