Care Power Information

About The Book

<p>This book is a critique and provincialization of Western social science and Global Northern academia, by the author of <i>The Digital Coloniality of Power</i>. It exposes shared colonial and extractive rationalities and histories of research, higher education, digitalization, and bioeconomy while proposing in the idea of <em>BluesCollarship</em>, a sketch for an alternative culture of worlding and commoning knowledge work and for making care matter in research and higher education<i>.</i></p><p></p><p>In a discourse analysis and provincialization of research and higher education, a tradition of elitist White-Collaredness in academia and in the social sciences, in particular, is criticized, and an alternative attitude towards the production, transfer, and use of knowledge – <i>BluesCollarship </i>– is proposed. The latter is rooted in a different idea of what "infrastructure" is, and in practices of decoloniality. Noting the current political climate of propaganda and populism, the persistence of social inequalities as well as of racism and misogyny, it is proposed that <i>how</i> people give warrant for knowledge claims should be reviewed under different terms. A coherent theme is that there is a genealogical root for current neo-extractive and neo-colonial rationalities in the Athenian idea of <i>oikos</i>, which conflates family, household, and property. </p><p></p><p>In taking a distinctly <i>writerly</i> approach – rather than giving ready-made answers – the book aims at permanently provoking readers at every turn to think further, as well as <i>before-and-beyond</i> what is written, but to do so in <i>thinking together with Others</i>. Thus the book addresses scholars and students from across the social sciences who seek challenges to established ways of thinking in academia without simply replacing one canon for another. This book is for those who think of themselves as knowledge and culture laborers in this age of precarization, who seek to replace the university and cognitive capitalism with a pluriversity and an infrastructure built on knowledge and culture as fundamental values.</p> <p>PART A: (As in <i>a priori</i>) – Of Mythonauts and Mythophants</p><p></p><p>Introduction (or, rather: <i>hors d’oeuvre hors-texte</i>): Against “White Collar” Sociology</p><p></p><p>1. Mythical Engines: On Theory, Knowledge, and Technologies</p><p>PART B: (As in <i>Belonging </i>and <i>Being</i>) – Under the Spell of a Myth: <i>Oikos </i>as Operating System</p><p></p><p>2. Matters of Fact, Matters of Interest, Matters of Care</p><p></p><p>3. <i>Oikos</i>, Property, Urban Normativity: The Source Code for Class and Psyche</p><p></p><p>4. Remanence of the <i>Oikos </i>in the FQu Economy and Digital Coloniality</p><p></p><p>5. Care Power Information: A B’n’B for <em>O</em><em>ikos</em>?</p><p></p><p>6. The Emergence of Green Precarity: Bioeconomies as Technological Zones in the Imaginary of the Global Rural-Urban Matrix</p><p>PART C: (As in Creative Misunderstanding, Care, and Commoning) – Contact Zones and Imaginaries as Permeable Borders of Empirical Arenas on the Road toward <i>BluesCollarship</i></p><p></p><p>7. Nomadic Statehood: Toward a Theory of the Question “When are States”?</p><p></p><p>8. Covfefe that <i>Matters</i>: Toward a Different Sociological Imagination</p><p></p><p>9. Making Trouble in, for, and with “The Canon” – Toward a Sociology of Possibilities</p><p></p><p>10. Concluding <i>Matters</i>: Commoning Infrastructural Power in the Pluriversity – Going Before-and-Beyond <i>Oikos </i>with BluesCollarship</p>
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