Since 2008, the global economic crisis has exposed and deepened
the tensions between austerity and social security--not just as
competing paradigms of recovery but also as fundamentally different
visions of governmental and personal responsibility. In this sense,
the core premise of neoliberalism--the dominant approach to
government around the world since the 1980s--may by now have
reached a certain political limit. Based on the premise that
markets are more efficient than government, neoliberal reforms were
pushed by powerful national and transnational organizations as
conditions of investment, lending, and trade, often in the name of
freedom. In the same spirit, governments increasingly turned to the
private sector for what were formerly state functions. While it has
become a commonplace to observe that neoliberalism refashioned
citizenship around consumption, the essays in this volume
demonstrate the incompleteness of that image--as the social limits
of neoliberalism are inherent in its very practice."Ethnographies
of Neoliberalism" collects original ethnographic case studies of
the effects of neoliberal reform on the conditions of social
participation, such as new understandings of community, family, and
gender roles, the commodification of learning, new forms of protest
against corporate power, and the restructuring of local political
institutions. Carol J. Greenhouse has brought together scholars in
anthropology, communications, education, English, music, political
science, religion, and sociology to focus on the emergent
conditions of political agency under neoliberal regimes. This is
the first volume to address the effects of neoliberal reform on
people's self-understandings as social and political actors. The
essayists consider both the positive and negative unintended
results of neoliberal reform, and the theoretical contradictions
within neoliberalism, as illuminated by circumstances on the ground
in Africa, Europe, South America, Japan, Russia, and the United
States. With an emphasis on the value of ethnographic methods for
understanding neoliberalism's effects around the world in our own
times, "Ethnographies of Neoliberalism" uncovers how people realize
for themselves the limits of the market and act accordingly from
their own understandings of partnership and solidarity.
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