دانلود کتاب Thinking Beyond Capitalism, Conference Proceedings
by Aleksandar Matković, Mark Losoncz, Igor Krtolica (eds.)
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عنوان فارسی: فکر فراتر از سرمایه داری، مقالات کنفرانس |
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Capitalism international conference which was organized in Belgrade
by the Group for Social Engagement Studies (Institute for Philosophy
and Social Theory) in June 2015. The main aim of this conference was
to open space for a general discussion of the problems raised by contemporary
capitalism, its crisis and its critiques. But how is it at all
possible to make sound statements about contemporary capitalism?
How does one adequately diagnose the current state of the economy?
Clearly there is no consensus whether the financial crisis which culminated
in 2007-2008 should be seen as a symptom of the structural
crisis of neoliberal capitalism only, or of capitalism in general. Moreover,
one should keep in mind that the term ‘crisis’ is itself laden with
different ideologems. The discourse on ‘crisis’ implies that there is a
superior prior state of capitalism, free of any crisis, and subsequently
that we are now witnessing a phase which is alien to the ‘normal
functioning’ of the system. Should we understand the crisis merely
as means for restructuring the existing system, or as the beginning
of an irreversible demise of the current mode of production, or even
an objective indetermination between the two possibilities? Has the
crisis enabled the exact preservation of the status quo and prevented
any change, or was it on the contrary the crucial catalyst for the politicization
of the otherwise depoliticized actors within late capitalism?
And in any case, on what ground relies our answers to this alternative?
We are indeed simultaneously exposed to various suggestions, more
or less grounded suggestions, apologias and identifications of fundamental
contradictions within the capitalist reproduction process.
In The Communist Manifesto Marx and Engels argue that capitalism
is a social order which arises and subsists in the form of a critique of
all alternative orders and subjective dispositions. In that perspective,capitalism has proven more radical than its competitors: it has destroyed
the ‘Ancien Régime’, has rendered all societal bonds flexible
and has constantly revolutionized the means of production. It is a
system in which “all that is solid melts into air, all that is holy is profaned”.
To what extent, then, is it even possible to formulate a critique
of such societal system, a system that has managed to incorporate critique
itself? Can one stage a revolution against the ‘revolution’ itself?
If capitalism thus emerges as the actual constitutive framework of our
thought, how do we begin to think beyond capitalism?