The Aporia of Power: Crisis and the Emergence of the Corporate State

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The Aporia of Power: Crisis and the Emergence of the Corporate State
Abstract
The argument focuses on the corporate state as an increasingly significant political assemblage that has enabled new configurations of power with related social effects. Here the discussion proceeds from Karl Polanyi's thesis in The Great Transformation. A critical idea that Polanyi pursued related to the state production of economism and individualism, which prepared the ground for the expansion of capital in its globalizing form. The essay develops this idea, indicating that the nationalist capitalism of the state led to a radical change in the political and social orders of states, gradually giving rise to the corporate state assemblage. The emphasis here is on the corporate state as a socio-political order that places radically distinct structural dynamics into impossible conjunction, leading to progressively disastrous social effects concerning poverty and the emergence of new configurations in which war and violence take specific shapes.
Publication
Social Analysis
Volume
54
Issue
1
Pages
125-151
Date
May 30, 2010
Journal Abbr
Social Analysis
Language
English
ISSN
0155977X
Short Title
The Aporia of Power
Accessed
2017-05-30, 4:21 p.m.
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Kapferer, Bruce. 2010. “The Aporia of Power: Crisis and the Emergence of the Corporate State.” Social Analysis 54 (1): 125–51. DOI: 10.3167/sa.2010.540108.
Publication year
Keywords
  • bureaucratic processes
  • corporate state
  • crisis
  • economism
  • globalization
  • Great Transformation, The (Book)
  • individualism
  • nation-state
  • poverty
  • power (social sciences)
  • reterritorialization
  • violence
  • war
  • war machine

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