Re-reading Friedrich Hayek and Karl Polanyi in the Late-Modern Condition of Fragility
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Cha, Taesuh (Author)
Title
Re-reading Friedrich Hayek and Karl Polanyi in the Late-Modern Condition of Fragility
Abstract
The cardinal role of complexity in Friedrich Hayek’s theory of the market has hardly gone unnoticed. Indeed, there is now a considerable corpus of literature that has established the importance of spontaneity as a central concept around which neoliberal economic theory revolves. However, as William Connolly analyzes, its closed conception of economic processes simplifies real economic volatilities and ignores both modes of self-organization and creativity found in democracy and social movements that periodically irrupt into market processes. This article builds upon this critique of neoliberalism and employs Karl Polanyi’s genealogy of modern capitalism to understand historical imbrications between the market and the social and their contribution to the fragility of capitalism. Polanyi’s notions of “(dis-)embeddedness” and the “double movement” not only show us a more “complex” view of modern political economy but also provide us with important lessons for political responses to the recent crisis of neoliberal capitalism.
Publication
Political Studies Review
Volume
15
Issue
3
Pages
391-403
Date
August 2017
Journal Abbr
Political Studies Review
Language
English
ISSN
14789299
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Cha, Taesuh. 2017. “Re-Reading Friedrich Hayek and Karl Polanyi in the Late-Modern Condition of Fragility.” Political Studies Review 15 (3): 391–403. DOI: 10.1177/1478929916644943.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
- capitalism
- complexity (philosophy)
- complexity theory
- CONNOLLY, William
- fragility
- Friedrich Hayek
- genealogy
- HAYEK, Friedrich A. von (Friedrich August), 1899-1992
- POLANYI, Karl, 1886-1964
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