Cynthia Cruz
Born
Germany
Website
Genre
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The Melancholia of Class: A Manifesto for the Working Class
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published
2021
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5 editions
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The Glimmering Room
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published
2012
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4 editions
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Ruin
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published
2006
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3 editions
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How the End Begins
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published
2016
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Wunderkammer
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published
2014
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4 editions
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Hotel Oblivion
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published
2022
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2 editions
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Disquieting: Essays on Silence (8) (Essais Series)
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published
2019
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3 editions
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Dregs
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published
2018
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Guidebooks for the Dead
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published
2020
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2 editions
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Year Zero
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published
2009
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“Neoliberalism insists that if we work hard enough, we can earn as much money as anyone else. Of course, the concept of meritocracy is integral to neoliberalism and erases the reality of capital itself, that capitalism is not just material capital but also, importantly, social and cultural capital. Without these forms of capital, (p. 77) one cannot, in fact, “succeed” in a capitalist culture. One obvious example is the art world, where one can only have their work shown in a gallery if they have connections to that gallery (galleries do not, for the most part, accept unsolicited submissions). All the cash in the world can’t create the generations of social connections of a middle-class family, whose circle might include art collectors, gallerists, critics, and artists. It is also the values and unspoken rules of the ruling class that distinguish who is allowed in and who is not.”
― The Melancholia of Class: A Manifesto for the Working Class
― The Melancholia of Class: A Manifesto for the Working Class
“To resist assimilation is to insist on our working-class origins, on carrying with us the lives and histories of our families, communities, histories, and culture. To give up pretending that one is not who one is, is to render one’s self marginalized. It is to refuse neoliberalism — which insists on homogeneity — with all of its ideologies of aspiration, optimism, progress, and the idea that power and money ought to reside in the hands of the ruling class. I don’t personally care if the middle class has money or material things or power. What I care about is that the working class and the poor lack material goods, jobs that could provide such goods, agency, and mastery over our lives and the lives of those in our communities.”
― The Melancholia of Class: A Manifesto for the Working Class
― The Melancholia of Class: A Manifesto for the Working Class
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