Until recently, anyone who suggested nationalising the banks would have been derided as a ‘quack’ and a ‘crank’, as lacking the most basic understanding of the functioning of a ‘complex, globalised world’. The grip of ‘orthodoxy’ disqualified the idea, and many more, without the need even to offer a counter-argument.
And yet, in this time of intersecting crises, when it seems like everything could, and should, have changed, it paradoxically feels as though very little has. Individuals and companies have hunkered down to try and ride out the crisis. Nationalisations and government spending have been used to prevent change, not initiate it. Anger and protest have erupted around different aspects of the crises, but no common or consistent reaction has seemed able to cohere. We appear unable to move on.
For many years, social movements could meet and recognise one another on the *common ground* of rejecting neoliberalism, society’s old *middle ground* -- those discourses and practices that defined the centre of the political field. The crisis of the middle has meant a crumbling of the common.
And what now? Will neoliberalism continue to stumble on without direction, zombie-like? Or, is it time for something completely different?
CONTENTS
Turbulence, ‘Life in limbo?’
Gifford Hartman, ‘California
in Crisis: Everything touched by capital turns toxic’
Bini Adamczak and Anna Dost, ‘What
would it mean to lose? On the history of actually-existing failure’
Frieder Otto Wolf and Tadzio
Mueller, ‘Green New Deal: Dead end or pathway beyond
capitalism?’
p.m., ‘It’s all about potatoes and
computers: Recipes for the cook-shops of the future’
Colectivo Situaciones, ‘Disquiet in
the impasse’
George Caffentzis, ‘‘Everything must
change so that everything can stay the same’: Notes on Obama’s Energy Plan’
Walter Mignolo, ‘The communal and the decolonial’
Massimo De Angelis, ‘The tragedy of
the capitalist commons’
Rebecca Solnit, ‘Falling Together’
Rodrigo Nunes, ‘What were you wrong
about ten years ago?’
ALSO FEATURING…
…a collection of texts, ten years after the protests against the World Trade Organisation in Seattle, asking people from across the global movement, ‘What were you wrong about ten years ago?’, at t-10.
Contributors to the feature are: David Solnit, Gustavo Esteva, Emir Sader, Phil McLeish, Rubia Salgado, João Pedro Stédile, A CrimethInc ex-Worker, Precarias a la Deriva, Trevor Ngwane, Marcela and Oscar Olivera, Heloisa Primavera, Chris Carlsson, The Free Association, David Bleakney, Olivier de Marcellus, Go Hirasawa and Sabu Kohso, John Clarke, Guy Taylor, Thomas Seibert, Dr Simon Lewis, Amador Fernández-Savater.
The Issue is illustrated by the photo series ‘Flat Horizon’ by Marcos Vilas Boas.
Turbulence: Ideas for Movement are: David Harvie, Keir Milburn, Tadzio Mueller, Rodrigo Nunes, Michal Osterweil, Kay Summer, Ben Trott.
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Turbulence is free, but we ask that you make a donation towards postage: http://turbulence.org.uk/donate/ (any additional donations greatly appreciated!)
All texts are also freely available via our website as of today.
HELP OUT
A collection of resources to help publicise the issue (posters, flyers, web-banners, etc…) can be found here: http://turbulence.org.uk/turbulence-5/turbulence-5-resources/
Get in touch if you can help out translating any of the articles in this issue. editors@turbulence.org.uk
Order a bundle of the magazine to distribute in your part of the world.
www.turbulence.org.uk | editors@turbulence.org.uk