A Theory Of Crisis
What do we mean by crisis today? This episode looks at money power and climate after 2008 and asks what we can do next.
How do we make sense of the multitude of so-called crises that dominate our current conjuncture? Is polycrisis a useful concept for getting to grips with the present condition of political economy? Are its proponents right to embrace uncertainty at the expense of theoretical explanation? Or can we hope to make sense of what's going on and chart a path forward?
Chris Saltmarsh is a postgraduate researcher at University of Sheffield. Dillon Wamsley is a postdoctoral researcher the Sheffield Political Economy Research Institute (SPERI). They are producers and co-hosts of Crisis Point, a SPERI Presents... limited series introducing the political economy of capitalist crises, providing historical and theoretical rigour to discourses around crisis in the present.
In this final episode, they review the series by proposing a definition and theory of crisis. They draw distinction between crises of accumulation and legitimation, reflect on the nature of political economy in the aftermath of the 2008 crash, consider what the idiosyncrasies of climate change mean for the general theory, and finish by asking 'what is to be done'?
Recommended Reading:
1) Tooze, 'Chartbook #130 Defining polycrisis - from crisis pictures to the crisis matrix' (2022)
2) Holgersen, Against the Crisis: Economy and Ecology in a Burning World (Verso, 2024)
Works referenced in this episode:
1) Gamble, The Spectre at the Feast (Bloomsbury, 2009)
2) Adam Tooze on polycrisis (YouTube lecture)
Credits
- Host and Producer: Chris Saltmarsh (Postgraduate Researcher at the University of Sheffield)
- Host and Producer: Dillon Wamsley (Postdoctoral Researcher at the University of Sheffield)
- Podcast Produced By: SPERI Presents… Committee
- Music By: Andy_Gambino