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Living Through Capitalism - (New Horizons) by James A Chamberlain (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- This book explores how capitalism uses and abuses life, and presents communities of life as a practical means of resistance.
- Author(s): James A Chamberlain
- 216 Pages
- Philosophy, Political
- Series Name: New Horizons
Description
About the Book
Sketches communities of life as a radical alternative to capitalist devastation.
Book Synopsis
This book explores how capitalism uses and abuses life, and presents communities of life as a practical means of resistance. In particular, the book shows how capitalism exploits life's capacity for self-production across myriad species, enlists us in environmentally damaging behaviour, inflicts immense physical and mental suffering in unjust and avoidable ways, and undermines the ethical quality of life for all.
The best chance to find meaning in this context, James A. Chamberlain argues, is resistance, and the affirmation of communities of life. The book proposes eight theses on communities of life, including: the orientation of communities of life to satisfy the needs of all beings that constitute them, and to the growth of life rather than economic growth; the abolition of private property in favour of various forms of shared ownership; post-work politics; and the need to recognize the interdependence of life to enact multi-species communities.
Review Quotes
The vantage point of life. This is the emergency perspective Chamberlain gives us in Living Through Capitalism - a vantage point that anchors thinking on what matters: how capitalism degrades life, but also where hope lies - in what he calls 'communities of life'. At this historical juncture where humanity is equipped equally well for self-destruction and renewal, this book steers the critical imagination away from many of the traps that have made progress untenable and even unthinkable.--Albena Azmanova, City St George's University of London
This is an expansive and ambitious book. Working productively across traditions, including analytic Marxism, Marxist feminism, eco-socialism, continental philosophy, and critical theory, Chamberlain makes a compelling case for the myriad ways that capitalism undermines and destroys human and non-human life and charts a hopeful path for resistance and social transformation.--Amy Allen, The Pennsylvania State University