Compulsory Creativity: A Critique of Cognitive Capitalism
Author(s) -
Steen Nepper Larsen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
culture unbound journal of current cultural research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2000-1525
DOI - 10.3384/cu.2000.1525.146159
Subject(s) - capitalism , creativity , normative , transformative learning , commodity , externality , sociology , originality , cognition , economics , positive economics , neoclassical economics , economic system , epistemology , political science , market economy , psychology , social psychology , politics , law , microeconomics , philosophy , pedagogy , neuroscience
Contemporary capitalism can be labelled cognitive capitalism. In this dynamic, demanding and extremely transformative mode of production, knowledge becomes a strategic force of production and an important commodity, while concepts and ideas become items. This article sheds light on some of the implications of the emergence of a cognitive capitalism. In response to modern oxymorons, such as compulsory creativity and mandatory originality, this article offers various attempts to interpret and criticise how human inventiveness and a whole range of externalities get attuned to economic and market strategies, depriving them their natural, social and individual qualities. The aim of this article is to renew and sharpen a critique of the new type of capitalism and to foster some normative bricks that might be able to inspire alternative ways of thinking and living
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