|
1 Introduction: The Postcolonial Condition as a Strategic Concept for Critiquing This World |
|
|
1 | (30) |
|
|
1 | (7) |
|
|
8 | (3) |
|
3 A Return to Political Economy |
|
|
11 | (5) |
|
|
16 | (3) |
|
5 The Postcolonial Condition as a Strategic Concept |
|
|
19 | (12) |
|
2 The Postcolonial Predicament |
|
|
31 | (28) |
|
1 Production of Knowledge, Decline of Theory and the Postcolonial World |
|
|
31 | (4) |
|
2 Translation, Equivalence, and the Making of the Postcolonial World |
|
|
35 | (5) |
|
3 The Subject of the Postcolonial Predicament: The Migrant |
|
|
40 | (5) |
|
4 The Subject of the Postcolonial Predicament: Labour |
|
|
45 | (4) |
|
5 Dialectical Understanding of the Postcolonial Predicament |
|
|
49 | (10) |
|
3 Postcolonial Dynamics of Accumulation |
|
|
59 | (30) |
|
1 The "Ground Outside": Boundaries of Accumulation |
|
|
59 | (4) |
|
2 Some Reflections on the Organic Composition of Postcolonial Capital and Labour |
|
|
63 | (7) |
|
3 Accumulation as Transition |
|
|
70 | (2) |
|
4 Accumulation and the Reordering of Space |
|
|
72 | (6) |
|
5 War, Accumulation and the Postcolonial Critique |
|
|
78 | (11) |
|
4 Living Labour I: Reproduction of Life and Labour |
|
|
89 | (28) |
|
1 Living Labour and the Labour of Living |
|
|
89 | (7) |
|
2 The Resilient Life of Postcolonial Labour |
|
|
96 | (6) |
|
3 Labour's Spectral Presence in the Market |
|
|
102 | (15) |
|
5 Living Labour II: Logistics, Migration, and Labour |
|
|
117 | (28) |
|
1 Migration and Changing Forms of Labour |
|
|
117 | (3) |
|
2 The History of Nation and the History of Migrant Labour |
|
|
120 | (4) |
|
3 Infrastructure, Supply Chains, and Logistical Nightmares |
|
|
124 | (7) |
|
4 The New Territoriality of Capital: Data Centres in the Postcolonial World |
|
|
131 | (14) |
|
6 Theories of Postcolonial Economy |
|
|
145 | (30) |
|
1 The Fetish of Difference |
|
|
145 | (9) |
|
|
154 | (11) |
|
|
165 | (10) |
|
7 The Problematic of Dual Power |
|
|
175 | (28) |
|
1 The Topography of Dual Power |
|
|
175 | (2) |
|
2 Lenin and Mao on Dual Power |
|
|
177 | (6) |
|
3 Autonomy of Workers' Struggles and the Issue of Dual Power |
|
|
183 | (6) |
|
4 New Questions around Dual Power |
|
|
189 | (14) |
|
8 The Problematic of People |
|
|
203 | (30) |
|
1 How To Study People and Classes in the History of Struggles and Revolutions |
|
|
203 | (4) |
|
2 Citizens, People and the Political Moment |
|
|
207 | (4) |
|
|
211 | (8) |
|
|
219 | (14) |
|
9 The Fragmented Subject and a Theory of Leadership |
|
|
233 | (28) |
|
1 Subject as a Product of Idealist Theorisation |
|
|
233 | (4) |
|
2 If Not the Philosophical Subject, Then What? |
|
|
237 | (4) |
|
|
241 | (7) |
|
4 The Emergence of the Postcolonial Political Subject |
|
|
248 | (4) |
|
5 Collective Subject and Leadership |
|
|
252 | (9) |
|
10 Rebuilding the Theory of Crisis as a Postcolonial Task |
|
|
261 | (30) |
|
1 The Working Class Perspective on Crisis |
|
|
261 | (9) |
|
2 Lenin, Crisis, and the Postcolonial Condition |
|
|
270 | (5) |
|
3 The Crisis of the Postcolonial Condition |
|
|
275 | (5) |
|
4 The Historical Immanence of Crisis |
|
|
280 | (11) |
Bibliography |
|
291 | (22) |
Index |
|
313 | |