Producing salience or keeping silence? An exploration of topics and non-topics of Special Eurobarometers
Simon Glendinning
LEQS – LSE 'Europe in Question' Discussion Paper Series from European Institute, LSE
Abstract:
The term “neoliberalism” is encountered everywhere today. In popular leftist political rhetoric it is often simply a place-holder for “contemporary capitalism”, “austerity politics”, and “all that is bad in our world”, giving that rhetoric the appearance of a new diagnostic edge. However, one could be excused for thinking that its intelligibility is in inverse proportion to its ubiquity. By defining it in terms of its conceptual relationship with classical liberalism this paper offers a justification for thinking about our time as period in which a particular “community of ideas” has sought (with some success) to establish a neoliberal hegemony. Doing so reveals, however, that there are in fact a variety of neoliberalisms, and that the period we now inhabit is best conceived in terms of the rise of a distinctively economic variation. Europe’s history is sketched (anachronistically) in terms of shifting patterns and transitions in which neoliberal variants vie for power. Setting those transitions within a wide-angled vision of Europe’s modernity as inseparable from a movement of the decentring of our understanding of “man”, the chance for a new shift is identified – one to be accompanied, no doubt, by “a surge of laughter” that has been heard, regularly and without fail, throughout the entirety of Europe’s history.
Keywords: Neoliberalism; Hegemony; Europe; University; Philosophy (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2015-03
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-his
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eiq:eileqs:89
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