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John Welsh [7]John A. Welsh [1]John F. Welsh [1]
  1.  10
    Struggling beyond the paradigm of Neoliberalism.John Welsh - 2020 - Thesis Eleven 158 (1):58-80.
    Whilst the Neoliberal alludes to an array of very real material practices and axioms of contemporary capitalism, the concept of Neoliberalism itself has arguably become moribund. Worse, perhaps it has become an asphyxiating and enervating monolith, a ‘ptolemization’ from which our critical thinking cannot escape. The key strategy of the article is to explore the Neoliberalism concept as a ‘mode of telling’, and how the constitutive moments of that concept have been discursively constructed into a hegemonic discursive formation. Whilst the (...)
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  2.  9
    Max Stirner's Dialectical Egoism: A New Interpretation.John F. Welsh - 2010 - Lexington Books.
    This book interprets Max Stirner's The Ego and Its Own as a critique of modernity and traces the basic elements of his dialectical egoism through the writings of Benjamin Tucker, James L. Walker, and Dora Marsden. Stirner's concept of 'ownness' is the basis of his critique of the dispossession and homogenization of individuals in modernity and is an important contribution to the research literature on libertarianism, dialectics, and post-modernism.
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  3.  7
    Dispossessing academics: The shift to ‘appropriation’ in the governing of academic life.John Welsh - 2020 - European Journal of Social Theory 23 (3):350-369.
    This article offers a critical theoretical exploration of the transformation of academic life that is currently taking place under the sign of ‘neoliberalization’. The main aim is to differentiate appropriation from exploitation as strategies of surplus labour dispossession, to identify the growth of appropriative techniques in academic life, and to situate the proliferation of such techniques in the broader transformations of global political economy. Alloyed with poststructuralist social theory, the historical materialist thrust of the article demonstrates how, in the technologically (...)
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  4.  6
    Why Historians Will End Capitalism.John Welsh - 2023 - Utopian Studies 34 (1):100-130.
    Abstractabstract:Though the prospect seems a million miles away, interest in the end of capitalism has been as longstanding as it is utopian, but do we really understand what we mean when we speak of the end of capitalism? Maybe we have things the wrong way round, and in our understandable preoccupation with the future we fail to appreciate how prospective ends often lie in the past. While the expression might refer to practices, experiences, and real social relations, capitalism is a (...)
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  5.  15
    Policing Academics: The Arkhè of Transformation in Academic Ranking.John Welsh - 2018 - Critical Horizons 19 (3):246-263.
    ABSTRACTThis article attempts a properly critical and political analysis of the “police power” immanent to the form and logic of academic rankings, and which is reproduced in the extant academic literature generated around them. In contrast to the democratising claims made of rankings, this police power short-circuits the moment of democratic politics and establishes the basis for the oligarchic power of the State and its status quo. Central in this founding political moment is the notion of the Arkhè, a necessarily (...)
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  6.  28
    Speaking of universities. By Stefan Collini. Pp 304. London: Verso. 2017. £16.99 . ISBN: 9781786631398.John Welsh - 2018 - British Journal of Educational Studies 66 (1):136-139.
  7.  7
    The political aesthetic of the British city‐state: Class formation through the global city.John Welsh - 2019 - Constellations 26 (1):59-77.
  8.  19
    The political technology of the ‘Camp’ in historical capitalism.John Welsh - 2021 - Contemporary Political Theory 20 (1):96-118.
    So much of what we experience in neoliberal capitalism resembles the operation of the camp. How then can we understand the camp as a political technology of labour control recurrent in historical capitalism, and why would we want to? Driven by the perennial imperatives to govern and to accumulate, the camp as a modulation of social control allows us to explore the role of ‘meta-disciplinary’ technique in the ‘real subsumption of labour’. The aims here are to question the sanguine expectations (...)
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