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Neferti X. M. Tadiar, "Remaindered Life" (Duke UP, 2022)

Neferti X. M. Tadiar, "Remaindered Life" (Duke UP, 2022)

FromNew Books in Critical Theory


Neferti X. M. Tadiar, "Remaindered Life" (Duke UP, 2022)

FromNew Books in Critical Theory

ratings:
Length:
64 minutes
Released:
Sep 15, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

In Remaindered Life Neferti X. M. Tadiar offers a new conceptual vocabulary and framework for rethinking the dynamics of a global capitalism maintained through permanent imperial war. Tracking how contemporary capitalist accumulation depends on producing life-times of disposability, Tadiar focuses on what she terms remaindered life—practices of living that exceed the distinction between life worth living and life worth expending. Through this heuristic, Tadiar reinterprets the global significance and genealogy of the surplus life-making practices of migrant domestic and service workers, refugees fleeing wars and environmental disasters, criminalized communities, urban slum dwellers, and dispossessed Indigenous people. She also examines artists and filmmakers in the Global South who render forms of various living in the midst of disposability. Retelling the story of globalization from the side of those who reach beyond dominant protocols of living, Tadiar demonstrates how attending to remaindered life can open up another horizon of possibility for a radical remaking of our present global mode of life.
Shraddha Chatterjee is a doctoral candidate at York University, Toronto, and author of Queer Politics in India: Towards Sexual Subaltern Subjects (Routledge, 2018).
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Released:
Sep 15, 2022
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Interviews with Scholars of Critical Theory about their New Books