Biosocial Relations of Production

Nowadays, life itself is one of the most active zones of capitalist production. Not only has biology been upgraded to Big Science, biological material and information are increasingly the subject of engineering, banking, reproduction, and exchange. The description and broad implications of the refig...

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Veröffentlicht in:Comparative studies in society and history 2009-04, Vol.51 (2), p.288-313
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description Nowadays, life itself is one of the most active zones of capitalist production. Not only has biology been upgraded to Big Science, biological material and information are increasingly the subject of engineering, banking, reproduction, and exchange. The description and broad implications of the refiguring of life itself and its intrusion into economics and politics represent some of the most important issues on the academic agenda at the beginning of the twenty-first century (Pálsson 2007). Foucault's works on biopolitics (see, for instance, Foucault 1994) have obviously contributed critical insights with respect to the current refashioning of the human body, illuminating the political and governmental dimensions of these developments (Inda 2005; Rose 2006; Gottweis and Peterson 2008; Nowotny and Testa 2009; Lock and Nguyen 2009). Recently, a series of scholars have revisited the early writings of Marx, sometimes in combination with Foucauldian perspectives, in their attempt to make sense of the political economy of modern biotechnology, including the fragmenting of body parts and the labor process involved. One of the emerging themes in current discussions relates to the conception and role of labor in the reproduction of bodies and body parts. While Marx may not be an obvious source of innovative perspectives on the modern production of human biovalue, a somewhat unique industry that had not arrived in his time, his early works offer useful insights into contemporary developments.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Sociological Abstracts; Jstor Complete Legacy; Cambridge Journals Online
subjects Alzheimer's disease
Animal human relations
Animals
Banking
Biology
Biopolitics
Biotechnology
Body
Business
Capitalism
Capitalist production
Commodification
Cultural anthropology
Estrangement
Ethnography
Forces and relations of production
Human body
Human genetics
Humans
Innovations
Labor
Labor economics
Labor process
Labour of Life
Labour relations
Marxian analysis
Medical genetics
Medical sociology
Modes of production
Nature
Ova
Political Action Committees
Political economy
Political Factors
Politics
Social relations
Society
Strathern, Marilyn
Technological change
title Biosocial Relations of Production
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