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[Y150.Ebook] Ebook Download Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work, by Nick SRNICEK, Alex Williams

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Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work, by Nick SRNICEK, Alex Williams

Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work, by Nick SRNICEK, Alex Williams



Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work, by Nick SRNICEK, Alex Williams

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Inventing the Future: Postcapitalism and a World Without Work, by Nick SRNICEK, Alex Williams

A major new manifesto for a high-tech future free from work

Neoliberalism isn’t working. Austerity is forcing millions into poverty and many more into precarious work, while the left remains trapped in stagnant political practices that offer no respite.

Inventing the Future is a bold new manifesto for life after capitalism. Against the confused understanding of our high-tech world by both the right and the left, this book claims that the emancipatory and future-oriented possibilities of our society can be reclaimed. Instead of running from a complex future, Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams demand a postcapitaiist economy capable of advancing standards, liberating humanity from work and developing technologies that expand our freedoms.

  • Sales Rank: #35037 in Books
  • Published on: 2015-11-17
  • Released on: 2015-11-17
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.20" h x .80" w x 6.00" l, .85 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 256 pages

Review
“A conceptual launch pad for a new socialist imagination.”
—Mike Davis, author of Planet of Slums

“Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams’ project dares to propose a different way of thinking and acting. Given the fizzling of the Occupy moment, a radical rethinking of the anarchic approach is badly needed but just not happening. This book could do a lot of work in getting that rethink going.”
—Doug Henwood, author of Wall Street

“A powerful book: it not only shows us how the postcapitalist world of rapidly improving technology could make us free, but it also shows us how we can organise to get there. This is a must-read.”
—Paul Mason, author of Postcapitalism: A Guide to Our Future

“Srnicek and Williams demonstrate how a sustainable economic future is less a question of means than of imagination. The postcapitalist world they envision is utterly attainable, if we can remember that we have been inventing the economy all along.”
—Douglas Rushkoff, author of Present Shock: When Everything Happens Now

“Neoliberalism and austerity seem to reign supreme—the idea of a society not run for profit seems impossible. Or does it? The fascinating Inventing the Future by Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams argues for a radical transformation of society.”
—Owen Jones, New Statesman books of the year 2015

“I love the way [Srnicek and Williams] talk about a basic income as something really transformative.”
—Caroline Lucas, British Member of Parliament

“A future free from work might seem unrealistic, but it is actually the elephant in the room that [David] Cameron et al. would rather you ignored. Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams’ fabulous study opened my eyes to the role technology might play in making society possible again.”
—Peter Fleming, author of the Mythology of Work, from the Times Higher Education Supplement

“Inventing the Future is unapologetically a manifesto, and a much-overdue clarion call to a seriously disorganized metropolitan left to get its shit together, to start thinking—and arguing—seriously about what is to be done … It is hard to deny the persuasiveness with which the book puts forward the positive contents of a new and vigorous populism; in demanding full automation and universal basic income from the world system, they also demand the return of utopian thinking and serious organization from the left.”
—Los Angeles Review of Books

“In Inventing the Future, Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams take on the two key questions of the left, if I can characterise them broadly: why are we so bad at saying stuff, and do we have anything to say? Their diagnoses of the shortcomings of what they call ‘folk politics,’ are perceptive, clear, brutal, but respectful. Their prescription for the future can seem vertiginously sudden—you’ll need to either get on board with a basic citizen’s income, or form a better refutation than ‘it sounds expensive,’ and fast. But critically, they identify our urgent task: to own modernity.”
—Zoe Williams, Guardian

“Inventing the Future is exactly what we need right now. With immense patience and care, it sets out a clear and compelling vision of a postcapitalist society. Equally importantly, it lays out a plausible programme which can take us from 24/7 capitalist immiseration to a world free of work.”
—Mark Fisher, author of Capitalist Realism: Is There No Alternative?

“Most important book of 2015.″
—Aaron Bastani, co-founder of Novara Media

“Inventing the Future offers an ambitious, thoughtfully creative and meticulously researched blueprint for a new strategy toward building a mass global movement to counter the hegemony of neoliberal capitalism … Srnicek and Williams offer a profoundly thoughtful, meticulously analyzed contribution to this body of work. Most importantly, they offer a glimmer of hope that the future is something that might still be invented by us, not imposed from above.”
—PopMatters

“Accessible and original.”
—Nicholas Korody, Archinect

“As well as books such as Guy Standing’s The Precariat: The New Dangerous Class and Paul Mason’s Postcapitalism, one recent text is talked about more than most among people interested in UBI. Inventing the Future was published last year and has already created significant buzz in leftwing circles,”
—John Harris, Guardian

“This is a book I’ve been waiting for …�The purpose of neo-liberalism is to cancel the future, where tomorrow looks exactly like today only with more stuff and more debt. To hell with that! Our lives are too short and too precious to exist in this Matrix. Please read the book, tell others to read it and let’s invent our future.”
—Neal Lawson, Compass

“Srnicek and Williams have courageously drafted a call to re-imagine left politics from top to bottom.”
—Fred Turner, Public Books

About the Author
Nick Srnicek is a lecturer at City University. He is the author of Platform Capitalism�and�the forthcoming After Work: What's Left and Who Cares? (with Helen Hester).

Alex Williams is a lecturer in the sociology department at City, University of London. He is the author of the forthcoming Hegemony Now (with Jeremy Gilbert).

Most helpful customer reviews

13 of 14 people found the following review helpful.
An extraordinary opportunity awaits humanity
By Malvin
“Inventing the Future” by Nick Srnicek and Alex Williams offers both a practical strategy and hopeful vision of life beyond neoliberalism. The book is a collaboration between Mr. Srnicek, who is a progressive thinker, educator and author with Mr. Williams, who is a brilliant PhD student. The author’s breakthrough analysis suggests that a post-capitalist future is possible.

Srnicek and Williams critique the “folk politics” of today’s Left for its failure to offer a systemic challenge to capitalism. The authors believe an equivalent to the Right’s Mont Pelerin Society is needed to articulate an expansive Leftist vision for a better future. An astute analysis supports the author’s contention that a Euro-centric capitalism must necessarily yield to a new, more encompassing concept of humanity whose “synthetic freedom” will know no boundaries.

Fortunately, Srnicek and Williams offer a strategy to achieve a “post work consensus”. The key components of the strategy include: full automation (to free labor from routine work); a sharply reduced work week; and a universal basic income (UBI). The authors recognize that consensus-building must focus on persuading the media, academia and business of the necessity for change.

On that point, I found Srnicek and Williams’ discussion of the world’s surplus population to be very informative. Capital has no solution to intractable unemployment in the global south that has been caused by a process of proletarianization in an era of post-industrialism. However, the looming prospect of “full unemployment” spreading to the north should be welcomed: humanity has an extraordinary opportunity to break the work ethic and the suffering religiosity of its primitive past. With the benefits of technology freely shared amongst a humanity that has been freed of brutality, greed and competition, one cannot help but be excited about the new horizons that might finally open up for us.

I highly recommend this excellent book to everyone.

7 of 7 people found the following review helpful.
A Source for Hope
By J. Edgar Mihelic, MBA
When I was reading this, lying in bed my wife asked me what I was reading now – the format of the book is enough that it shook her out of the idea that it was just another book and instead made her ask.

I told her it might be the most important book I ever read. So many books that strike a criticism of the existing world and a future that can come through the mechanisms recommended in the book just have so many holes and they leave me feeling hopeless. But I keep reading them, both in the “Destroy Capitalism” and the “Reform Capitalism” genres. But the authors here have a smart take that make me optimistic view of how we get from here to there. We need a party moving forward the invented future. We need emancipation, a universal income, and we need to watch the rise of the robots. But we need to leverage that rise. The program is incomplete, but it is a foundation. And it is a source for optimism. The kids are all right.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
Reclaiming Modernity
By Yousaf Nishat-Botero
In "Inventing The Future" S&W (Srnicek & Williams) show that the transition to a post-capitalist society is less an issue of means than of imagination. S&W help imagine a post-capitalist society, and develop a roadmap towards it. This roadmap is based on a Left-Accelerationist politics and a Laclauian formulation of hegemony. S&W's contribution should be seen as part of a larger debate on 21st Century politics, economics, and society. Proposing the need to break from 20th century versions of Socialism, S&W critique the contemporary Left's emphasis on temporal, spatial, and conceptual immediacy. This means moving beyond what S&W call "Folk Politics": a narrow commitment to horizontalism, localism, consensus, and prefigurative forms of action. S&W's post-capitalist vision is both different from previous experiments, and open-ended as to its establishment. While providing an analysis of the failures of Social Democratic parties, S&W delineate the decades-long work behind the establishment of Neoliberal Hegemony. For William Davies, neoliberalism can be understood as an effort to anchor modernity in the market, or make economics the main measure of progress and reason. S&W propose overcoming Folk Politics by paying close attention to the strategic rise of neoliberal intellectuals - with the 70's Stagflation Crisis as a turning point - like Milton Friedman and Friedrich V. Hayek, organizations like the Mont Pelerin Society, and think tanks like Cato Institute.

For S&W, the Left must "reclaim the future" and build a populist counter-hegemonic force founded on concrete demands. Such demands, which must have a utopian edge and be grounded in real tendencies, can shift the political equilibrium, and build platforms beyond traditional blue-collar unionism and socialist parties. Underpinning these demands is a strategy that envisions change in terms of decades (cultural shifts) rather than years (electoral cycles). S&W, looking at the phenomenon of Premature-Deindustrialization (Contemporary Industrial Societies) and Jobless-Growth (Post-Industrial Societies), show that technological unemployment can create the conditions for increasing "Synthetic Freedom". Achieving Synthetic Freedom, which requires the attainment of Formal Rights & Material Capacities, can be assisted by maximizing automation, reducing the working week (job-sharing), providing a UBI (Universal Basic Income), and adopting a post-work ethic. The outcomes of Premature-Deindustrialization and Jobless-Growth have a direct impact on society, and variations of basic income provision are already being proposed by mainstream policy makers and economists. UBI experiments in Finland, Holland, Uganda, Kenya, and by Y-Combinator, are investigating the effects of a UBI on assistance-efficiency, standards of living, creativity, and leisure time.

With an orientation towards the Future, S&W aim to reclaim the "Empty Signifier of Modernism". Doing so involves reviving Modernist ideals such as freedom, universality, and reason, while decoupling such ideals from their relationship with, for example, colonialism, patriarchy, and imperialism. As expressed by Mark Fisher, much of anti-capitalism has anti-modernist tendencies, and easily slides from anti-statism into anti-politics. For S&W, this requires, as part of a Left modernising project, decoupling desire and technology from Capital, and reclaiming the value of freedom from the Right rather than only focusing on inequality. Synthetic Freedom, already mentioned above, is synthetic in the sense that it is "artificially" produced through the provision of socio-technical infrastructure, rather than through the elimination of social interference. Formal Rights are meaningless without the material capacities needed to exercise them. Following the likes of Paul Mason and Toni Negri, S&W believe that the subject of post-capitalism will emerge in the development of a new "mode of production". This new mode of production is based on a system of technologies such as Allende's bold Cybersin Project, additive manufacturing, automated logistics, social media, alternative currencies, etc. For S&W, such socio-technical infrastructure, which can facilitate "non-market" forms of production, distribution, deliberation, and ownership, can make new ways of seeing ourselves and relating to others possible.

With this book, S&W have influenced important debates we will be having for years to come. S&W's work should be read alongside the work of people like Paul Mason, Mariana Mazzucato, Yochai Benkler, and more. Shorter complementary texts include Bertrand Russell's In Praise of Idleness, David Graeber's "On Bulls*** Jobs", Karl Marx's "Fragment on Machines", John M. Keynes's "Economic Possibilities For Our Grandchildren", Oscar Wilde's The Soul of Man Under Socialism, Yochai Benkler's "Complexity & Humanity", Alex Williams's "Escape Velocities", and Roberto Unger's "Beyond The Small Life: A Letter To Young People".

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