The queer thing about neoliberal pleasure: A foucauldian warning

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Abstract

Through a careful reading of Foucault's 1979 lectures on neoliberalism along-side Volumes 1 and 2 The History of Sexuality, I argue that scholarship on both neoliberalism and queer theory should heed Foucault's framing of both neoliberalism and sexuality as central to biopolitics. I thus offer two correctives to these fields of scholarship: for scholarship on neoliberalism, I locate a way to address the ethical bankruptcy of neoliberalism in a manner that Marxist analyses fail to provide; for scholarship in queer theory, I warn that the longstanding embrace of non-conformity as a mode of resistance to normalization is suspiciously neoliberal. I conclude with the possibility of rehabilitating the concept of jouis-sance as a non-fungible limit to the enterprising rationality of neoliberalism that, if historicized and especially racialized, might offer a meaningful response to the increasing ethical collapse wrought by the neoliberalization of our lives. © Shannon Winnubst 2012.

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APA

Winnubst, S. (2012). The queer thing about neoliberal pleasure: A foucauldian warning. Foucault Studies, (14), 79–97. https://doi.org/10.22439/fs.v0i14.3889

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