|
Product Description
What is a life worth? In the wake of eugenics, new quantitative racist practices that valued life for the sake of economic futures flourished. In The Economization of Life, Michelle Murphy provocatively describes the twentieth-century rise of infrastructures of calculation and experiment aimed at governing population for the sake of national economy, pinpointing the spread of a potent biopolitical logic: some must not be born so that others might live more prosperously. Resituating the history of postcolonial neoliberal technique in expert circuits between the United States and Bangladesh, Murphy traces the methods and imaginaries through which family planning calculated lives not worth living, lives not worth saving, and lives not worth being born. The resulting archive of thick data transmuted into financialized “Invest in a Girl” campaigns that reframed survival as a question of human capital. The book challenges readers to reject the economy as our collective container and to refuse population as a term of reproductive justice.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Race After Technology: Abolitionist Tools for the New Jim Code
- A Billion Black Anthropocenes or None (Forerunners: Ideas First)
- Self-Devouring Growth: A Planetary Parable as Told from Southern Africa (Critical Global Health: Evidence, Efficacy, Ethnography)
- Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene (Experimental Futures)
- The History of Sexuality, Vol. 1: An Introduction
- Race for Profit: How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership (Justice, Power, and Politics)
- A Brief History of Neoliberalism
- Arts of Living on a Damaged Planet: Ghosts and Monsters of the Anthropocene
- Surrogate Humanity: Race, Robots, and the Politics of Technological Futures (Perverse Modernities: A Series Edited by Jack Halberstam and Lisa Lowe)
- One-Dimensional Queer
*If this is not the "The Economization of Life" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 21, 2024 02:32 +08.