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http://www.solidarity-us.org/current/node/2036
Is Anti-Capitalism Enough? The New Crisis & the Left
— Howard Brick

     The New Spirit of Capitalism
     by Luc Boltanski and Eve Chiapello
     translated by Gregory Elliott
     Verso Books 2006, paperback edition 2007, 656 pages, $39.95.

WHETHER OR NOT the current economic crisis and a historic 
presidential election open up hidden potentials for renewed 
popular protest and collective action, it is obvious that the 
radical Left has lost a great deal of its size, visibility, élan 
and influence since the 1970s.

When French sociologists Luc Boltanski and Eve Chiapello commenced 
their work together in the mid-1990s, resulting in this monumental 
and inventive book, they saw not only that the Right had surged 
and the Left declined since heady days of revolt in the late 1960s.

They also believed that “social critique has not seemed so 
helpless for a century.” That is, the practical and theoretical 
opposition to the status quo was weaker than at any time since the 
beginnings of the modern mass labor and socialist movement.(1)

Why was the opposition so deep in the hole? After all, the signs 
of growing inequality were evident, and activism persisted through 
the 1980s and '90s in addressing acute problems and grievances, 
concerning AIDS, homelessness, the plight of the undocumented, or 
the lack of modern medical care in the poor world at large. But 
almost no one talked much any longer of the systemic framework — 
of capitalism — that demanded a correspondingly systemic 
challenge, thought Boltanski and Chiapello (hereafter B&C).

In this respect, things may have been different in the United 
States than in France. Here, plenty of people were talking about 
capitalism — in an overwhelming din of celebration.

While the remarkable energy signaled by the burst of the 
“anti-globalization,” or global justice movement, promised to 
“revive critique,” as B&C put it, those campaigns suffered a sharp 
setback in the wake of a renewed Right turn following 9-11. Even 
the momentous antiwar protests of 2003 lost energy steadily as the 
Iraq war continued.

Now, nearly ten years after B&C first ventured their judgment that 
“capitalism has benefited from the enfeeblement of critique,” it 
remains unclear if much is different.(2) Capitalism has suddenly 
revealed its fragility for all to see, but it is quite another 
matter whether the Left now has the standing or the poise to offer 
the radical, democratic and transitional demands that would, one 
would think, have a growing audience amidst the present crisis and 
current calls for “change.”

It is the great ambition of The New Spirit of Capitalism to 
diagnose the peculiar shape that capitalism has assumed since the 
1970s, to explain how and why its new forms have eluded a 
forceful, concentrated challenge, and to venture proposals for 
reinvigorating, indeed reinventing an effective anticapitalist 
critique.

It’s not as if everything is new: Capitalism, in B&C’s eyes, 
remains a system for pursuing profits and limitless accumulation, 
amidst the generalization of wage-labor; and anticapitalism — 
critiques of the domination, alienation, inequality, and 
antisocial egoism spawned by the system—has kept it company since 
its very beginning. Yet there has been plenty of room for 
shape-shifting along the way.

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