It is an honour to have had Inventing the Future considered in such depth and detail, and we want to begin by extending our thanks to everyone who contributed to this symposium. This response is a useful moment for us to clarify our argument, to respond to the most significant questions, to acknowledge limitations of the book, and to correct some misunderstandings. We do so in a spirit of humility, given that – as we wrote in the introductory post – we see this book as a contribution to a larger debate and hopefully the spark for reflection on what we think are important issues for the contemporary left.
Post-Work Futures
In Joseph, Sophie and David’s pieces, some fundamental questions are raised about what precisely a post-work world entails, particularly with respect to concerns around the environment, labour, social reproduction, and colonialism. Does a high-tech post-work world entail the exhaustion…
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after this forum came out i decided to scrap my “review”. got something else in the pipe line on ITF though. a darker take maybe.
no worries follow what grabs you.
http://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/allinthemind/the-use-and-abuse-of-benzos/6927002
I would like to read this “darker take” very much Arran. I’m going to read the book again in light on my recent hard turn to patchwork theory…