4.7 • 1.5K Ratings
🗓️ 27 December 2020
⏱️ 107 minutes
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From The Dig archives: Dan interviews Melinda Cooper about her book, Family Values: Between Neoliberalism and the New Social Conservatism, which makes the case that neoliberalism and social conservatism have been consistent collaborators in creating an economy that redistributed wealth ruthlessly upwards with a risk-absorbing family at its privatized center. We'll be back next week with a new episode.
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0:00.0 | This episode of The Dig is brought to you by our listeners who support us at patreon.com and by haymarket books which has loads of great left-wing titles perfect for dig listeners like you. One that you might like is on Edward |
0:16.8 | Saeed, remembrance of things passed by Hamid Debashi. Edward Saeed was a towering figure in post-colonial studies |
0:26.0 | and in the struggle for justice in his native Palestine, |
0:30.0 | best known for his critique of Orientalism in Western portrayals of the Middle East. |
0:35.6 | As a public intellectual, activist, and scholar, Saeed forever changed how we read the world |
0:41.3 | around us and left an indelible mark on subsequent generations. |
0:46.0 | Hamid Debashi, himself a leading thinker and critical public voice, |
0:51.0 | offers a unique collection of reminiscences, travel logs, and essays that |
0:56.8 | document his own close and longstanding scholarly, personal, and political relationship with Saeed. |
1:04.2 | In the process, they place the enduring significance of Edward Saeed's legacy in an unfolding |
1:10.5 | context and locate his work within the moral imagination and environment of the time. |
1:17.0 | On Edward Saeed, remembrance of things passed by Hamid Debashi, out now from Haymarket Books. |
1:26.0 | The Dig is taking this week off so we can chill a bit and so I can catch up on my reading. |
1:38.0 | Here is one of my favorite episodes from the archives from January 2019, Melinda Cooper on her |
1:46.7 | extraordinary book Family Values Between Neoliberalism and the new social conservatism, |
1:54.0 | which makes the case that neoliberalism and social conservatism |
1:58.0 | have been consistent collaborators in creating an economy |
2:02.0 | that redistributed wealth ruthlessly upwards with a risk-absorbing family at its privatized center. |
2:12.0 | If you've been listening to our recent episodes on |
2:14.3 | neoliberalism with Wendy Brown and Stephanie Mudge, this one with Cooper |
2:20.0 | pairs nicely. Also if you want something a little less intensely analytical than a normal dig format interview, |
2:28.0 | I encourage you to listen to antibody, the three-part narrative, |
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