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9781503643550 Academic Inspection Copy

Neoliberalism and Race

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Lars Cornelissen argues that the category of race constitutes an organizing principle of neoliberal ideology. Using the methods of intellectual history and drawing on insights from critical race studies, Cornelissen explores the various racial constructs that structure neoliberal ideology, some of which are explicit, while others are more coded. Beginning in the interwar period and running through to recent developments, Neoliberalism and Race shows that racial themes have always pervaded neoliberal thinking. The book's key argument is that neoliberal thought is constitutively racialized-its racial motifs cannot be extracted from neoliberalism without rendering it theoretically and politically incoherent. The book aptly explores a wide variety of racial constructs through the structure of neoliberal ideology, deconstructing the conceptualizations works of landmark thinkers such as Ludwig von Mises, Friedrich Hayek, Peter Bauer, Thomas Sowell, Charles Murray, and others from the early twentieth century to the present. In this original-perhaps controversial-critique, Cornelissen asserts that neoliberal thinkers were not just the passive recipients of racial discourse, but also directly impacted it.
Lars Cornelissen is a historian of neoliberalism. His writings have been published in History of European Ideas, Constellations, and Modern Intellectual History.
"As our neoliberal world appears to degenerate into racist authoritarianism, Cornelissen demonstrates that race has always been central to the neoliberal project. Compellingly researched and wonderfully broad in its scope, Neoliberalism and Race deserves to fundamentally alter how we understand what neoliberalism has been." --Arun Kundnani, author of What is Antiracism? "Cornelissen's Neoliberalism and Race is a game-changer. In its pages, we find early neoliberals working for the British Colonial Office and their successors wrestling with the twilight of empire. Cornelissen's brilliant and relentless analysis will convince you that even when they claim to be race-blind, neoliberals are always talking about race." --Melinda Cooper, author of Family Values
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