An Essay on the Neoliberal
Condition
Translated by Joshua David Jordan
Overview
"The debtor-creditor
relation, which is at the heart of this book, sharpens mechanisms of
exploitation and domination indiscriminately, since, in it, there is no
distinction between workers and the unemployed, consumers and producers,
working and non-working populations, between retirees and welfare recipients.
They are all 'debtors,' guilty and responsible in the eyes of capital, which
has become the Great, the Universal, Creditor."
—from The Making of the Indebted Man
—from The Making of the Indebted Man
Debt—both public debt and
private debt—has become a major concern of economic and political leaders. In The
Making of the Indebted Man, Maurizio Lazzarato shows that, far from being a
threat to the capitalist economy, debt lies at the very core of the neoliberal
project. Through a reading of Karl Marx’s lesser-known youthful writings on
John Mill, and a rereading of writings by Friedrich Nietzsche, Gilles Deleuze,
FĂ©lix Guattari, and Michel Foucault, Lazzarato demonstrates that debt is above
all a political construction, and that the creditor/debtor relation is the
fundamental social relation of Western societies.
Debt cannot be reduced to a
simple economic mechanism, for it is also a technique of “public safety”
through which individual and collective subjectivities are governed and
controlled. Its aim is to minimize the uncertainty of the time and behavior of
the governed. We are forever sinking further into debt to the State, to private
insurance, and, on a more general level, to corporations. To insure that we
honor our debts, we are at once encouraged and compelled to become the
“entrepreneurs” of our lives, of our “human capital.” In this way, our entire
material, psychological, and affective horizon is upended and reconfigured.
How do we extricate ourselves
from this impossible situation? How do we escape the neoliberal condition of
the indebted man? Lazzarato argues that we will have to recognize that there is
no simple technical, economic, or financial solution. We must instead radically
challenge the fundamental social relation structuring capitalism: the system of
debt.
About the Author
Maurizio Lazzarato is a
sociologist and philosopher in Paris. He is the author of The Making of the
Indebted Man: An Essay on the Neoliberal Condition and Signs and Machines:
Capitalism and the Production of Subjectivity, both published by
Semiotext(e)/The MIT Press.
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