A different kind of politics for a new kind of society – beyond work, scarcity and capitalism
Aaron Bastani is co-founder and senior editor at Novara Media. He holds a PhD from the New Political Communication Unit, University of London, examining social movements in the digital environment which fail to correspond to the traditional logic of collective action. His research interests include new media, social movements, asymmetric strategies and post-scarcity political economy. He has written for Vice, London Review of Books, Guardian and Open Democracy.
In 100 years' time many of the ideas in this book will be
mainstream, while kindergarten students laugh at our mainstream
economic textbooks. Bastani's genius is to see the future with
crisp clarity, unafraid of the consequences of being right.
*Paul Mason, author of Postcapitalism*
One of the most important books to come out of the British left in
recent years. Incredibly ambitious and wide-ranging, but also
well-written and readable, it provides a fascinating glimpse into a
future beyond scarcity and beyond capitalism. Not simply a set of
predictions about an unknowable future, it is a call to action to
those seeking to bring an entirely new world into being.
*Grace Blakeley, New Statesman*
The debate is no longer about tinkering with our current broken
social order, but replacing it: this fascinating book is an
absolutely critical contribution, and a must-read for all those who
aspire to build a new society.
*Owen Johns, author of The Establishment*
At a time when our horizons have shrunk, when instead of striving
for a better world we look backward to old comforts, Aaron Bastani
calls us to dream and struggle for the type of society finally fit
for humanity to live as humans should.'
*Bhaskar Sunkara, author of The Socialist Manifesto*
A startlingly sunny and audacious manifesto that reads the
extremity of current political, economic, and environmental crises
as a sign of the scale of opportunity for radical
change...[Bastani] gamely reclaims the stuff of dystopia for a more
buoyant vision . . . Bastani's arguments rest on the conviction
that the major problems that face citizens are political in
nature-and thus that their only possible solutions will be
political, too
*Harpers*
Angry and lyrical, uncompromising and vivid, Imperial Intimacies is
a daughter's reckoning with the bitter legacies of slavery and
colonialism as they come to shape the lives of families and
individuals, their dreams and desires. A deeply searching and often
moving book, it made me think again about the writing of family
history and about what it means to be British.
*Alison Light, author of Common People*
Bastani writes with pace, economy and infectious enthusiasm ...
There are more ideas crammed in here than in a whole shelf of
standard politics books. And in today's fraught world, the time to
read whole shelves of politics books may have passed.
*Guardian*
Fully Automated Luxury Communism offers a hopeful vision of a
possible future, one that, with its blend of utopian energy and
careful argumentation, is worth taking seriously.
*Vector*
Attempts to take the word back to Marx's post-work, post-scarcity
future.
*Bookforum*
A startlingly sunny and audacious manifesto that reads the
extremity of current political, economic, and environmental crises
as a sign of the scale of opportunity for radical
change...[Bastani] gamely reclaims the stuff of dystopia for a more
buoyant vision.
*Harpers*
A rising young leftwing provocateur . . .There are more ideas
crammed in here than in a whole shelf of standard politics
books
*Guardian*
[Fully Automated Luxury Communism] is a provocative ... reckoning
with the end of market capitalism, and what might follow ... in
outlining the benefits of decarbonised economies, worker-owned
businesses, people's banks, planet taxes and universal basic
services, Bastani is starting to put flesh on the spectre that
might one day haunt Europe again.
*New Statesman*
In outlining the benefits of decarbonised economies, worker-owned
businesses, people's banks, planet taxes and universal basic
services, Bastani is starting to put flesh on the spectre that
might one day haunt Europe again
*New Statesman*
Jeremy Corbyn's new left ... do not wish only to manage capitalism.
They want something more. They are something more. And this book is
an attempt to explain what that more is.
*Times*
[Bastani's] limpid prose, fuelled by an infectious revolutionary
elan, adroitly synthesises ... big ideas for lay readers and deftly
elucidates the continued relevance of Marx's writings... [Fully
Automated Luxury Communism] serves as a vital broadening of our
political horizons
*Morning Star*
A feisty manifesto . . . proposes a blueprint for a new society;
one in which advanced technology will free humanity from the
necessity to work
*New Internationalist*
An entertaining ... romp through some of the most profound
innovations and developments that could, if managed under the aegis
of socialism, transform the way in which we live our lives.
*Quietus*
A stimulating intervention ... fascinating on the dazzling
possibilities of the present
*New Humanist*
A knowingly provocative ... utopian manifesto ... a refreshing
departure from the the usual forecasts of machine-led
jobpocalypse.
*Times Literary Supplement*
It's a manifesto that imagines life in a post-capitalist world
where automation has replaced manual labour, and it applies the
theories of Marx to show how this could save us from dystopia. Its
a pretty audacious book.'
*Observer*
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