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Articles

Intimacies of the Common: Enclosure, Solidarity, and the Possibilities of Critical Publicity under Capitalism

Pages 392-404 | Published online: 24 May 2023
 

ABSTRACT

This essay places rhetorical theories of publicity and the common in conversation around the concept of intimacy. Defined as a felt sense of proximity or closeness, intimacy is a form of affective relation that underlies both private and public worldmaking practices, and that produces investments in certain forms of life and community. Considering the relationship between publicity and the common in terms of intimacy makes clear that dominant forms of contemporary publicity are predicated on racialized and gendered enclosures of intimacy that have dispossessed noncapitalist relationships to land and community and instead fostered intimacies conducive to capital accumulation. Our argument suggests that critical scholars who are concerned with contemporary capitalism’s subjection of life to the market have a common interest in attending to the ways these histories of enclosure shape the horizons of modern publicity. Our argument also suggests further attention be directed to forms of counterintimacy aimed at producing anticapitalist coalition.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank the special issue editors and the anonymous reviewer for their feedback on earlier versions of the essay.

Disclosure Statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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