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Speculating On Careless Lives

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  • Shaun French
  • James Kneale

Abstract

This paper is concerned with biofinancialisation; that is, with the ways in which contemporary processes of financialisation and biopolitics intermesh and interpolate. While the significance of the relation between the bios and circuits of finance has begun to be recognised, biofinancialisation remains little interrogated. In seeking to address this lacuna, the paper focuses on the recent transformation of the UK after-retirement market and, in particular, the invention of enhanced and impaired pension annuities. Enhanced annuity products like the ‘smokers’ pension’ provide, we argue, a striking example of the ways in which biofinancialisation works to fashion new worlds for capitalist accumulation, in this case through the capitalisation of morbidity and of the residual vital capacities of life, and the ways in which novel forms of biofinancial subject and subjectivity are produced to populate such worlds -- to make them live. The paper concludes by identifying three political fracture points or fault lines in the enterprise to secure life biofinancially through the enhancing of annuities: first, the promise of reconciliation; second, the promise of autonomy and freedom; and, third, the promise of a good retirement.

Suggested Citation

  • Shaun French & James Kneale, 2012. "Speculating On Careless Lives," Journal of Cultural Economy, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 5(4), pages 391-406, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:taf:jculte:v:5:y:2012:i:4:p:391-406
    DOI: 10.1080/17530350.2012.703619
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Christian Marazzi, 2010. "The Violence of Financial Capitalism," MIT Press Books, The MIT Press, edition 1, volume 1, number 1584350830, December.
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    Cited by:

    1. Matthias Bernt & Laura Colini & Daniel Förste, 2017. "Privatization, Financialization and State Restructuring in Eastern Germany: The case of Am südpark," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 41(4), pages 555-571, July.
    2. Leigh Johnson, 2013. "Index Insurance and the Articulation of Risk-Bearing Subjects," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 45(11), pages 2663-2681, November.
    3. Kar, Sohini, 2023. "Domestic values: gendered labor and the uncanniness of critique in marketing life insurance for women," LSE Research Online Documents on Economics 120591, London School of Economics and Political Science, LSE Library.
    4. French, Shaun & Kneale, James, 2015. "Insuring biofinance: Alcohol, risk and the limits of life," economic sociology. perspectives and conversations, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, vol. 17(1), pages 16-24.
    5. Leigh Johnson, 2015. "Catastrophic fixes: cyclical devaluation and accumulation through climate change impacts," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 47(12), pages 2503-2521, December.

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