Identity, Mediation, and the Cunning of Capital

Ani Maitra author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Northwestern University Press

Published:30th May '20

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Identity, Mediation, and the Cunning of Capital cover

In Identity, Mediation, and the Cunning of Capital, Ani Maitra calls for an urgent reevaluation of identity politics as an aesthetic maneuver regulated by capitalism. A dominant critical trend in the humanities, Maitra argues, is to dismiss or embrace identity through the formal properties of a privileged aesthetic medium like literature, cinema, or even the performative body. In contrast, he demonstrates that identity politics becomes unavoidably real and material only because the minoritized subject is split between multiple sites of mediation - visual, linguistic, and sonic - while remaining firmly tethered to capitalism's hierarchical logic of value production. Only in the interstices of media can we track the aesthetic conversion of identitarian difference into value, marked by the inequities of race, class, gender, and- sexuality.
 
Maitra's archive is transnational and multimodal. Moving from anticolonial polemics to psychoanalysis to diasporic experimental literature to postcolonial feminist and queer media, he lays bare the cunning through which capitalism produces and fragments identity through an intermedial 'aesthetic dissonance' with the commodity form. Maitra's novel contribution to theories of identity and to the concept of mediation will interest a wide range of scholars in media studies, critical race and postcolonial studies, and critical aesthetics.

As invigorating and imaginative as it is informative, Maitra's argument is one with which all those working in identity, media, race, and postcolonial studies will have to reckon." - Rey Chow, author of Not Like a Native Speaker: On Languaging as a Postcolonial Experience

"Maitra provides a refreshing and necessary reassessment of the binds of identity politics in an increasingly mediated world. Here, cultural nationalism and antiessentialism are not at odds with one another. Their apparent conflict is the effect of a network of global capital able to antagonize as well as to incorporate anybody and any opposition. In Maitra's ingenious account of identity, opposition need not be oppositional." - David Eng, coauthor of Racial Melancholia, Racial Dissociation: On the Social and Psychic Lives of Asian Americans

ISBN: 9780810141797

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 405g

304 pages