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Hope lies in our richness, in the joy of our collective creativity. But that richness exists in the peculiar form of money. The fact that we relate to on another through money causes tremendous social pain and destruction and is dragging us through pandemics and war towards extinction. Richness against money: this battle will decide the future of humanity. If we cannot emancipate richness from money-capital-profit, there is probably no hope. Money seems invincible but the constant expansion of debt shows that its rule is fragile. The fictitious expansion of money through debt is driven by…mehr
Hope lies in our richness, in the joy of our collective creativity. But that richness exists in the peculiar form of money. The fact that we relate to on another through money causes tremendous social pain and destruction and is dragging us through pandemics and war towards extinction.
Richness against money: this battle will decide the future of humanity. If we cannot emancipate richness from money-capital-profit, there is probably no hope. Money seems invincible but the constant expansion of debt shows that its rule is fragile. The fictitious expansion of money through debt is driven by fear, fear of us, fear of the rabble. Money contains, but richness overflows.
In this final part of his ground-breaking trilogy, John Holloway expertly fuses anti-capitalism and anti-identitarianism, and brings hope into the critique of political economy and revolutionary theory, challenging us to find hope within ourselves and channel it into a dignified, revolutionary rage.
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Autorenporträt
John Holloway has published widely on Marxist theory, on the Zapatista movement and on the new forms of anti-capitalist struggle. His book Change the World without Taking Power has been translated into eleven languages and has stirred an international debate, and Crack Capitalism is a renowned classic. He is currently Professor of Sociology in the Instituto de Ciencias Sociales y Humanidades of the Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla in Mexico.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface: Stop that train Part I Rage-Hope-Richness 1. Today, any day. 2. Start again. Not from fear but from hope. Not from containment but from overflowing. 3. Better, start from antagonism, from struggle. 4. Start from anguish, from Janus. Start from Not Enough! Start from the hydra that we must slay. Part II We must re-learn hope 1. It is time to re-learn hope. 2. To learn hope is to learn to think hope: a docta spes. 3. Hope pushes beyond identity. 4. Our hope starts from the scream, not from absence. 5. The Scream takes us in a negative direction, to overflow. 6. Beyond negative thought: Thinking In-Against-and-Beyond. Part III Historicity 7. Hope-against is rooted in historicity. 8. Historicity does not mean historical materialism. 9. There is a Grand Narrative: the train taking us towards Destruction. It is a narrative to be broken. Part IV The Subject 10. Hope is not for victims, nor for heroes. 11. Richness is the revolutionary subject. 12. Listen to the latent Richness. 13. Listen again: there is a deeper level of latency. 14. Turn it all upside down, feel sorry for the capitalists. Part V The Object: Money 15. Hope is a movement of the subject against an object: a breaking against a binding. 16. The links in the chain of destruction are difficult to break. 17. The weakness of the binding lies not in the links between the forms but in their internal antagonisms. 18. Unbinding the binding: Revolutionising revolution. 19. Richness against the commodity: the world faces two ways. Part VI Think hope, think crisis 20. A theory of hope requires an understanding of the weakness or crisis of its object, the hoped-against. 21. Crisis is inherent in capital. 22. From crisis to restructuring, or not: this is the salto mortale of capital. Part VII Crisis postponed 23. Hope confronts the Hydra of Money. 24. Money rules. Money is the serial killer destroying us all. 25. Capital today is increasingly fictitious. Money is ill. 26. We are the subjects of the crisis of money. 27. Putting off disaster is the central principle of political economy. The abandonment of the gold standard opens the way to mob rule. 28. The war created the golden age of capital. Its crisis broke the link between gold and money. 29. The Volcker shock: the last attempt to impose sound money. 30. Black Monday: Debt takes off. 31. The breach between money and value continues to grow: a series of heart attacks. 32. The fragility of capital explodes in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Heart attack number 2? 33. The storm is on the horizon: Fire Next Time. 34. The storm breaks: the Coronacrisis. 35. The Great Fragility deepens. Part VIII A Book in search of a Conclusion. Hope in search of a Happy Ending 36. The Container cannot contain. 37. We are Rabble-Richness-Resistance-Rebellion. 38. From Rage to Dignified Rage, Rabia to Digna Rabia. 39. Emancipate richnesses! 40. Not enough. Thanks Notes Bibliography Index
Preface: Stop that train Part I Rage-Hope-Richness 1. Today, any day. 2. Start again. Not from fear but from hope. Not from containment but from overflowing. 3. Better, start from antagonism, from struggle. 4. Start from anguish, from Janus. Start from Not Enough! Start from the hydra that we must slay. Part II We must re-learn hope 1. It is time to re-learn hope. 2. To learn hope is to learn to think hope: a docta spes. 3. Hope pushes beyond identity. 4. Our hope starts from the scream, not from absence. 5. The Scream takes us in a negative direction, to overflow. 6. Beyond negative thought: Thinking In-Against-and-Beyond. Part III Historicity 7. Hope-against is rooted in historicity. 8. Historicity does not mean historical materialism. 9. There is a Grand Narrative: the train taking us towards Destruction. It is a narrative to be broken. Part IV The Subject 10. Hope is not for victims, nor for heroes. 11. Richness is the revolutionary subject. 12. Listen to the latent Richness. 13. Listen again: there is a deeper level of latency. 14. Turn it all upside down, feel sorry for the capitalists. Part V The Object: Money 15. Hope is a movement of the subject against an object: a breaking against a binding. 16. The links in the chain of destruction are difficult to break. 17. The weakness of the binding lies not in the links between the forms but in their internal antagonisms. 18. Unbinding the binding: Revolutionising revolution. 19. Richness against the commodity: the world faces two ways. Part VI Think hope, think crisis 20. A theory of hope requires an understanding of the weakness or crisis of its object, the hoped-against. 21. Crisis is inherent in capital. 22. From crisis to restructuring, or not: this is the salto mortale of capital. Part VII Crisis postponed 23. Hope confronts the Hydra of Money. 24. Money rules. Money is the serial killer destroying us all. 25. Capital today is increasingly fictitious. Money is ill. 26. We are the subjects of the crisis of money. 27. Putting off disaster is the central principle of political economy. The abandonment of the gold standard opens the way to mob rule. 28. The war created the golden age of capital. Its crisis broke the link between gold and money. 29. The Volcker shock: the last attempt to impose sound money. 30. Black Monday: Debt takes off. 31. The breach between money and value continues to grow: a series of heart attacks. 32. The fragility of capital explodes in the financial crisis of 2007/2008. Heart attack number 2? 33. The storm is on the horizon: Fire Next Time. 34. The storm breaks: the Coronacrisis. 35. The Great Fragility deepens. Part VIII A Book in search of a Conclusion. Hope in search of a Happy Ending 36. The Container cannot contain. 37. We are Rabble-Richness-Resistance-Rebellion. 38. From Rage to Dignified Rage, Rabia to Digna Rabia. 39. Emancipate richnesses! 40. Not enough. Thanks Notes Bibliography Index
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