Image for What's left of the world: education, identity and the post-work political imagination

What's left of the world: education, identity and the post-work political imagination

See all formats and editions

In 1960, Paul Goodman argued that the Fordist system that treated people as mere cogs in a machine had created a profound unhappiness in young people and in American society as a whole.

More than half a century later, professor David Blacker recognizes that decades of neoliberalism have pushed young people beyond unhappiness and into a collective identity crisis.

Overall, Americans no longer feel needed to do jobs that had previously anchored them in society and are becoming disconnected and purposeless.

The proliferation of new identities, based not on work but on consumption, is symptomatic of neoliberalism and its hyper-commodification and deregulation of everyday life.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£34.50
Product Details
Zero Books
1789040116 / 9781789040111
eBook (EPUB)
123.5
31/05/2019
England
English
264 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.