Fr. 236.00

Political Economy of Attention, Mindfulness and Consumerism - Reclaiming the Mindful Commons

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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Drawing together lively debates from the new economics of transition, resilience and well-being, sustainable consumption, and the emerging role of mindfulness in popular culture, this book speaks to audiences from both the sustainability disciplines and students of Buddhism and mindfulness. It shows that, in this consumer age, the underlying teachings of Buddhist mindfulness offer more than individual well-being at home and in the workplace, but also new sources of critical inquiry into our collective condition under the sway of consumer culture. Furthermore, the book provides a political economy context for the dramatic rise in popular interest around mindfulness practices and their associated Buddhist-inspired philosophical and psychological insights.


List of contents

Chapter 1. Towards a ‘Mindful Commons’ – The Anthropocene and the Attention Revolution
Chapter 2. The Spirit of Activism: Non-Violence as a Way of Life
Chapter 3. The Cartesian Legacy
Chapter 4. Foucault, Zen and the Art of Challenging Consumerism
Chapter 5. Conclusions: Attention Deficit and Ecological Degradation Advance Together

About the author

Peter Doran is a lecturer at the School of Law at Queen’s University Belfast, Northern Ireland.

Summary

The power of capital is the power to target our attention, mould market-ready identities, and reduce the public realm to an endless series of choices. This has far-reaching implications for our psychological, physical and spiritual well-being, and ultimately for our global ecology. In this consumer age, the underlying teachings of Buddhist mindfulness offer more than individual well-being and resilience. They also offer new sources of critical inquiry into our collective condition, and may point, in time, to regulatory initiatives in the field of well-being.
This book draws together lively debates from the new economics of transition, commons and well-being, consumerism, and the emerging role of mindfulness in popular culture. Engaged Buddhist practices and teachings correspond closely to insights in contemporary political philosophical investigations into the nature of power, notably by Michel Foucault. The 'attention economy' can be understood as a new arena of struggle in our age of neoliberal governmentality; as the forces of enclosure – having colonized forests, land and the bodies of workers – are now extended to the realm of our minds and subjectivity. This poses questions about the recovery of the 'mindful commons': the practices we must cultivate to reclaim our attention, time and lives from the forces of capitalization.
This is a valuable resource for students and scholars of environmental philosophy, environmental psychology, environmental sociology, well-being and new economics, political economy, environmental politics, the commons and law, as well as Buddhist theory and philosophy.

Additional text

"A Political Economy is an important contribution to acknowledge that mindfulness and associated mind–body practices are central, not peripheral, to collective liberation (Rowe 2017)." - Benedikt Schmid, Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning, University of Luxembourg.

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