After dispossession: ethnographic approaches to neoliberalization

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After dispossession : ethnographic approaches to neoliberalization. / Salemink, Oscar; Rasmussen, Mattias Borg.

In: Focaal, Vol. 2016, No. 74, 2016, p. 3-12.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Salemink, O & Rasmussen, MB 2016, 'After dispossession: ethnographic approaches to neoliberalization', Focaal, vol. 2016, no. 74, pp. 3-12. https://doi.org/10.3167/fcl.2016.740101

APA

Salemink, O., & Rasmussen, M. B. (2016). After dispossession: ethnographic approaches to neoliberalization. Focaal, 2016(74), 3-12. https://doi.org/10.3167/fcl.2016.740101

Vancouver

Salemink O, Rasmussen MB. After dispossession: ethnographic approaches to neoliberalization. Focaal. 2016;2016(74):3-12. https://doi.org/10.3167/fcl.2016.740101

Author

Salemink, Oscar ; Rasmussen, Mattias Borg. / After dispossession : ethnographic approaches to neoliberalization. In: Focaal. 2016 ; Vol. 2016, No. 74. pp. 3-12.

Bibtex

@article{7a7e659b19344222b704aa489aa2ee2c,
title = "After dispossession: ethnographic approaches to neoliberalization",
abstract = "Since the 1980s globalization has taken on increasingly neoliberalizing forms in the form of commoditization of objects, resources, or even human bodies, their reduction to fi nancial values, and their enclosure or other forms of dispossession. “After dispossession” provides ethnographic accounts of the diverse´ways to deal with dispossessions by attempts at repossessing values in connection to what has been lost in neoliberal assemblages of people and resources and thus how material loss might be compensated for in terms of subjective experiences of restoring value beyond the fi nancial. Th e analytical challenge we pursue is one of bridging between a political economy concerned with the uneven distribution of wealth and resources, and the profound changes in identity politics and subject formation that are connected to these. We therefore argue that any dispossession may trigger acts of repossession of values beyond the fi nancial realm, and consequently that suff ering, too, entails forms of agency predicated on altered subjectivities. This move beyond the suff ering subject reconnects the study of subjectivities with the analysis of alienation, disempowerment, and impoverishment through dispossession and attempts at recapturing value in altered circumstances.",
author = "Oscar Salemink and Rasmussen, {Mattias Borg}",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.3167/fcl.2016.740101",
language = "English",
volume = "2016",
pages = "3--12",
journal = "Focaal",
issn = "0920-1297",
publisher = "Berghahn",
number = "74",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - After dispossession

T2 - ethnographic approaches to neoliberalization

AU - Salemink, Oscar

AU - Rasmussen, Mattias Borg

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Since the 1980s globalization has taken on increasingly neoliberalizing forms in the form of commoditization of objects, resources, or even human bodies, their reduction to fi nancial values, and their enclosure or other forms of dispossession. “After dispossession” provides ethnographic accounts of the diverse´ways to deal with dispossessions by attempts at repossessing values in connection to what has been lost in neoliberal assemblages of people and resources and thus how material loss might be compensated for in terms of subjective experiences of restoring value beyond the fi nancial. Th e analytical challenge we pursue is one of bridging between a political economy concerned with the uneven distribution of wealth and resources, and the profound changes in identity politics and subject formation that are connected to these. We therefore argue that any dispossession may trigger acts of repossession of values beyond the fi nancial realm, and consequently that suff ering, too, entails forms of agency predicated on altered subjectivities. This move beyond the suff ering subject reconnects the study of subjectivities with the analysis of alienation, disempowerment, and impoverishment through dispossession and attempts at recapturing value in altered circumstances.

AB - Since the 1980s globalization has taken on increasingly neoliberalizing forms in the form of commoditization of objects, resources, or even human bodies, their reduction to fi nancial values, and their enclosure or other forms of dispossession. “After dispossession” provides ethnographic accounts of the diverse´ways to deal with dispossessions by attempts at repossessing values in connection to what has been lost in neoliberal assemblages of people and resources and thus how material loss might be compensated for in terms of subjective experiences of restoring value beyond the fi nancial. Th e analytical challenge we pursue is one of bridging between a political economy concerned with the uneven distribution of wealth and resources, and the profound changes in identity politics and subject formation that are connected to these. We therefore argue that any dispossession may trigger acts of repossession of values beyond the fi nancial realm, and consequently that suff ering, too, entails forms of agency predicated on altered subjectivities. This move beyond the suff ering subject reconnects the study of subjectivities with the analysis of alienation, disempowerment, and impoverishment through dispossession and attempts at recapturing value in altered circumstances.

U2 - 10.3167/fcl.2016.740101

DO - 10.3167/fcl.2016.740101

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2016

SP - 3

EP - 12

JO - Focaal

JF - Focaal

SN - 0920-1297

IS - 74

ER -

ID: 138174575