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Original Articles

The Anthropocene as a Figure of Neoliberal Hegemony

 

ABSTRACT

The idea of the Anthropocene postulates that, epistemically and ontologically, we must consider the climatic, geological, and biological systems of the Earth as essentially bound up with the technological systems that have been developed by human beings. This idea has been aesthetically configured through images of ‘Spaceship Earth’ and in the orbital pictures of light patterns emitted by human settlements across the globe. I will argue that this shift towards the idea of the Anthropocene is complicit with a certain kind of technological messianism, which assumes that the most serious problems of global warming and environmental despoliation will be solved by future technologies. Furthermore the impact of this futural orientation, which includes the idea of transhumanist adaptations to the consequences of climate change, has been to intensify the nexus between technological innovation, neoliberal economics, and entrepreneurial heroism that has come to shape the collective imagination of the future. This, I will argue, has profound consequences for the way human beings orientate themselves to their ethical and political responsibilities in respect of climate change, human suffering, and cosmopolitan democracy.

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No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

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Notes on contributors

Ross Abbinnett

Ross Abbinnett is senior lecturer in social theory at the University of Birmingham. He has written books on contemporary critical theory, the politics of happiness, and the social implications of technology. He is currently writing a book on the ‘Neoliberal Imagination’, which is due for publication in 2020 by Routledge.

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