Preface
Chapter 1 The Return of Ordinary Capitalism: Neoliberalism as the
New Normal
Chapter 2 Middle-Class Melancholia: Self-Sufficiency after the
Demise of Christianized Capitalism (U.S. Style)
Chapter 3 Occupy Precarity: Resisting the Limits of Collective
Agency under Neoliberalism
Chapter 4 The Deep Semiotic Structure of Deservingness: Discourse
and Identity in Neoliberal Welfare Policy
Chapter 5 The End of Social Work: Implementing a Neoliberal
Paternalism (with Basha Silverman)
Chapter 6 Schooling the Corporatized Citizen/Corporatizing the
School: From Grade School through College
Chapter 7 The Next Neoliberal Thing: Social Impact Bonds
Chapter 8 Getting Beyond Neoliberalism: The Road to Radical
Incrementalism
Notes
Index
Sanford F. Schram is Professor of Political Science and Faculty Associate at Roosevelt House Institute of Public Policy, Hunter College, CUNY.
"The Return of Ordinary Capitalism is an admirably extensive
inquiry into the subject of
neoliberalism and even proposes some ways out of our current
predicament." -- Political Studies Review
"Ihe Return of Ordinary Capitalism is remarkable in what it holds
together to illuminate our time: critical theory, empirical
accounting of contemporary inequality and precarity, case studies
on social welfare and education, and attunement to the
neoliberalization of everyday life. One need not agree with
Schram's arguments to be profoundly instructed and moved by them.
Clear, unpretentious and unafraid, this is a work for Occupy's next
round." --
Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley
"Sanford Schram focuses especially on recent turns in American
social policy but in the process he has written an excellent
synthesis of the Left analysis and critique of the contemporary
American political economy." -- Frances Fox Piven, The Graduate
Center, City University of New York
"In The Return of Ordinary Capitalism, Sanford Schram delivers an
acute, unflinching, and provocative analysis of our shared
conjunctural predicament. In the face of the brutal restoration of
business-as-usual capitalism and the widespread intensification of
neoliberalized rule, Schram matches incisive analytical critique
with a plea to push beyond the politics of left melancholia. The
charge here is not only to envisage-but to grasp-radical
potentialities on the terrain of the here and now." -- Jamie Peck,
author of Constructions of Neoliberal Reason
"Schram's volume is a beam of light by one of today's most incisive
theorists of neoliberalism and struggles of resistance and
transformation. Whether he is discussing changes in social welfare
policy, education, the Occupy movement, or his proposal for radical
incrementalism, his writing takes us on journeys that are
invigorating, insightful, and indispensable." -- Rom Coles, Social
Justice Institute, Australian Catholic University, author of
Visionary
Pragmatism: Radical and Ecological Democracy
"The essays gathered together in this book are extraordinarily
useful for change makers who seek to understand what it is they are
up against in twenty-first-century America that has made
effectively altering the status quo and rebalancing the relations
of power more and more difficult to achieve."
-- Janice Fine, Rutgers University in Perspectives on Politics
"Schram moves seamlessly between American political development,
path dependence, political economy, social movement analysis, and
discourse analysis to develop a powerful argument about our current
political and economic moment."
-- Mark Sawyer, University of California, Los Angeles in
Perspectives on Politics
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