Christian Marazzi's first book: a post-Fordist classic on the roots to
economic crises in the contemporary age.
Communication as work: we have recently experienced a profound
transformation in the processes of production. While the assembly line
(invented by Henry Ford at the beginning of the last century) excluded
any form of linguistic productivity, today, there is no production
without communication. The new technologies are linguistic machines.
This revolution has produced a new kind of worker who is not a
specialist but is versatile and infinitely adaptable. If standardized
mass production was dominant in the past, today we produce an array of
different goods corresponding to specific consumer niches. This is the
post-Fordist model described by Christian Marazzi in Capital and Affects
(first published in 1994 as Il posto dei calzini [The place for the
socks]). Tracing the development of this new model of labor from Toyota
plants in Japan to the most recent innovations, Marazzi's critique goes
beyond political economy to encompass issues related to social life,
political engagement, democratic institutions, interpersonal relations,
and the role of language in liberal democracies.
This translation at long last makes Marazzi's first book available to
English readers. Capital and Affects stands not only as the foundation
to Marazzi's subsequent work, but as foundational work in post-Fordist
literature, with an analysis startlingly relevant to today's troubled
economic times.
This Semiotext(e) edition includes the afterword Marazzi wrote for the
1999 Italian edition.