This introduction to the politics of poststructuralism focuses on two
interrelated themes: the culture of Western Marxism and contemporary
neoliberal capitalism. Poststructuralism is not a form of anti-Marxism,
Peters argues; indeed, poststructural philosophers view themselves in
some kind of relationship to the legacy of Marx. Either they have been
Marxist or still view themselves as Marxist. In a post-Marxist era they
have invented new ways of reading and writing Marx. Peters critically
engages neoliberalism, an ideology that is committed to the
revitalization of homo economicus and neoclassical economics. This book
is a deconstruction of neoliberalism, considered as a world-historical
political project aimed at a form of globalisation.