Google
×
inauthor:"Samuel A. Chambers" from books.google.com
These are indeed better overall descriptions of money, but they remain incomplete and inadequate: they rely too much on why the orthodoxy is wrong, thereby incorrectly assuming there is only one alternative (so-called heterodoxy).
inauthor:"Samuel A. Chambers" from books.google.com
This book explores the unique economic pressures found in capitalist societies, offering detailed yet concise analysis of basic concepts - commodities, money, exchange, interest - and investigating broader issues such as the source of ...
inauthor:"Samuel A. Chambers" from books.google.com
Drawing on the work of theorists including Marx, Althusser, Butler, Žižek and Rancière, Bearing Society in Mindmakes the strongest case possible for the theoretical importance and political necessity of this concept.
inauthor:"Samuel A. Chambers" from books.google.com
This book challenges this view, arguing for what Samuel A. Chambers calls an untimely politics which renders the past problematic and the future unpredictable.
inauthor:"Samuel A. Chambers" from books.google.com
This book, along with its companion volume, Judith Butler's Precarious Politics, marks an intellectual event for political theory, with major implications for feminism, women’s studies, gender studies, cultural studies, lesbian and gay ...
inauthor:"Samuel A. Chambers" from books.google.com
What if "liberal democracy" were a contradiction in terms? This book distinguishes liberalism (a logic of order) from democracy (a principle of disordering) to defend a Rancièrean vision of impure politics.
inauthor:"Samuel A. Chambers" from books.google.com
This means that the "positive economics" spoken of so fondly in the textbooks is nothing more than a contradiction in terms, and as this book demonstrates, there's no such thing as "the economy.
inauthor:"Samuel A. Chambers" from books.google.com
This book makes an important and fresh contribution to queer theory and to the understanding of television as politics.
inauthor:"Samuel A. Chambers" from books.google.com
This means that the "positive economics" spoken of so fondly in the textbooks is nothing more than a contradiction in terms, and as this book demonstrates, there's no such thing as "the economy.