Abstract
Since the 2008 financial crisis, the attempts to use Karl Polanyi's framework to make
sense of current developments have multiplied, producing a noticeable and lively debate.
This debate centres on the notion of double movement put forward by the Hungarian
thinker in his masterpiece – The Great Transformation. The paper is a contribution to this
debate. The first part addresses a series of questions that make the interpretations of the
double movement advanced so far not very compelling. To this end, a close reading of
Polanyi's text, with the aim of dismantling and rearticulating its analytical structure, is
carried out. The upshot is a dynamic and multistage picture of the double process as a
recurrent and vortex-like attempt to progressively commodify natural and social
resources against growing opposition. The second part employs this revised reading of
the double movement to explain the collapse of the postwar consensus politics, the
success of the neoliberal counterrevolution and the development of the knowledge
economy. The claim put forward here is that, in addition to sustained efforts to deepen
previous forms of commodification (land, labour and money), we are witnessing a
fullblown attempt to turn knowledge into a new fictitious commodity. Building on the
idea of digital Taylorism, the paper tries to show that information and computer
technologies are being used to standardise and routinise a growing number of intellectual,
professional and managerial activities which were able to escape previous attempts in this
direction. Once again, at the forefront of this process there are powerful state actors, who
are using New Public Management policies strategically to: support the enclosure of
intangible cultural resources through the creation of intellectual property rights regimes,
and undermine the counter-reaction of negatively affected societal actors by rising the
collective action problems they face.