On Life as a Fictitious Commodity: Cities and the Biopolitics of Late Neoliberalism

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
On Life as a Fictitious Commodity: Cities and the Biopolitics of Late Neoliberalism
Abstract
Building on a biopolitical understanding of the economic crisis, this essay contends that the occurrence of the crisis warns that life is not a real commodity but - to put it in Karl Polanyi's terms - a 'fictitious commodity'. This means that life cannot be integrally subsumed within the economy, and therefore the crisis is to be seen as a pathological way in which societies react to the pervasiveness of capitalist relations, showing the illusory character of self-regulating markets and ownership ideologies. Two mutually contradictory biopolitical responses to the neoliberal crisis, led by the state and grassroots movements respectively, are discussed in the concluding section of the essay.
Publication
International Journal of Urban & Regional Research
Volume
37
Issue
3
Pages
1067-1074
Date
May 2013
Journal Abbr
International Journal of Urban & Regional Research
Language
English
ISSN
03091317
Short Title
On Life as a Fictitious Commodity
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Rossi, Ugo. 2013. “On Life as a Fictitious Commodity: Cities and the Biopolitics of Late Neoliberalism.” International Journal of Urban & Regional Research 37 (3): 1067–74. DOI: 10.1111/1468-2427.12063.
Publication year
Keywords
  • biopolitics
  • biopolitics (sociobiology)
  • capitalism
  • consumers
  • crisis
  • fictitious commodities
  • global financial crisis, 2008-2009
  • government regulation
  • home ownership
  • housing
  • late neoliberalism
  • neoliberalism
  • urban economics

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