This depoliticised nature of the
contemporary, seen as the conceptual and experiential embodiment of globalised
capitalism, consequently poses problems far more significant than the mere
survival of the nation-state.
The time of the nation: negotiating global modernity | openDemocracy - 0 views
-
-
Undoubtedly, since the demise of the postmodern epoch in the popular and academic imagination, the acceleration of technological forces in commerce and communication - that have paved the way for increased capital accumulation, exchange and crisis - have only heightened what Foucault and Jameson gesture towards as a lived sensation of pure simultaneity.
-
In opposition to the crisis of the political generated by the false amalgamation of coeval living experiences, we might propose the concept of modernity; a concept that the nation-state might be perfectly situated to help elucidate. On this model, I would argue, modernity can be seen as linked to a increased self-consciousness of a secular conception of one's individual finitude (in the form of mortality but also one's personal and societal limits), and the collective negotiation of this issue via a democratic politics.
- ...10 more annotations...
1 - 2 of 2
Showing 20▼ items per page