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Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 27 May, 2009 - 13:58
Melinda Cooper and Angela Mitropoulos In the subprime crisis, which followed a mass desire to live above one's means, the usury that allowed it demonstrates the connected notions of productive capital and the heterosexual family unit. Here, Melinda Cooper and Angela Mitropoulos trace usury's genealogy in political economics, and praise those subprime ‘speculators' who are inverting its exorbitant demands
subject: AntiCapitalist | Credit | Debt | Financial Crisis | Mute Vol 2 #13 | Precarity | Race
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Wednesday, 30 July, 2008 - 18:22
Neil Gray Is Indianness just a German ideology? In the first of a two-part analysis of neoliberalism in the subcontinent, Neil Gray traces the history of Hindu cultural nationalism, from a colonialist mystique of pure spirituality to today's fascist pogroms and economic polarisation
subject: Asia | Neoliberal | Postcolonial | Race | State
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by anthony on Wednesday, 2 July, 2008 - 15:14
Richard Pithouse Richard Pithouse analyses the politics of “xenophobia and authoritarianism” in South Africa
subject: Africa | Nationalism | Race
OpenPublishing |
Submitted by unterschreber on Saturday, 28 June, 2008 - 15:08
unterschreber Finally Got the News Saturday, June 28, 8pm, £0 The Pullens Centre, 184 Crampton St, Elephant & Castle, London SE17 Rare screening of documentary (dir. Steward Bird, Rene Lichtman, Peter Gessner) on the League of Revolutionary Black Workers, from wildcat movement to formidable independent workers organization, inside and outside the auto factories of insurgent turn-of-the-'70s Detroit. subject: Books | Class | Film | History | Insurgency | Labour Struggles | N. America | Race | Social Movements | Strategy
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Thursday, 14 February, 2008 - 16:42
Elizabeth Povinelli On the pretext of a child sexual abuse crisis in Australia’s Northern Territory the Howard government passed emergency legislation and prepared a land invasion of aboriginal areas by police, doctors and the army. Elizabeth Povinelli locates this latest state of exception in a wider neoliberal project to impose work and austerity. Images and text box by Benedict Seymour
subject: Australasia | Biopolitics | Drugs | Law | Multiculturalism | Mute Vol 2 #7 | Nationalism | Neoliberal | Policy | Race
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 12 February, 2008 - 16:49
subject: Australasia | Biopolitics | Class | Mute Vol 2 #7 | Race | State
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 12 February, 2008 - 16:36
subject: Australasia | Biopolitics | Class | Mute Vol 2 #7 | Policy | Race | State
Editorial content |
Submitted by mute on Tuesday, 12 February, 2008 - 16:30
subject: Australasia | Biopolitics | Class | Mute Vol 2 #7 | Policy | Race
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