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New Labour's doppelte Kehrtwende: Anmerkungen zu Stuart Hall und eine alternative Perspektiv zu New Labour.

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New Labour's doppelte Kehrtwende: Anmerkungen zu Stuart Hall und eine alternative Perspektiv zu New Labour. / Jessop, Bob.
In: Das Argument, Vol. 256, 2004, p. 494-504.

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@article{6a573d20fc704cbaab82d4469124088c,
title = "New Labour's doppelte Kehrtwende: Anmerkungen zu Stuart Hall und eine alternative Perspektiv zu New Labour.",
abstract = "Stuart Hall offers yet another of his well-known bravura diagnoses in this recent critique of New Labour. He argues that its essential character can be understood in Gramscian terms as a dynamic transformist expression of neoliberalism with a social democratic face. Like his earlier analyses of Thatcherism and New Labour, however, his analysis is stronger on critical discourse analysis and his own political rhetoric than it is on its grasp of political economy and its implications for political practice. Indeed it would be interesting to subject this text itself to a critical discourse analysis to demonstrate the theoretical lacunae and the conceptual slippages in its powerful, persuasive, but ultimately flawed, exploration of this latest transformist project. I will focus on six issues raised by Hall{\^a}��s text and then offer an alternative analysis rooted in a regulation- and state-theoretical political economy.",
keywords = "Stuart Hall, new labour",
author = "Bob Jessop",
year = "2004",
language = "English",
volume = "256",
pages = "494--504",
journal = "Das Argument",
issn = "0004-1157",
publisher = "Argument-Verlag",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - New Labour's doppelte Kehrtwende: Anmerkungen zu Stuart Hall und eine alternative Perspektiv zu New Labour.

AU - Jessop, Bob

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - Stuart Hall offers yet another of his well-known bravura diagnoses in this recent critique of New Labour. He argues that its essential character can be understood in Gramscian terms as a dynamic transformist expression of neoliberalism with a social democratic face. Like his earlier analyses of Thatcherism and New Labour, however, his analysis is stronger on critical discourse analysis and his own political rhetoric than it is on its grasp of political economy and its implications for political practice. Indeed it would be interesting to subject this text itself to a critical discourse analysis to demonstrate the theoretical lacunae and the conceptual slippages in its powerful, persuasive, but ultimately flawed, exploration of this latest transformist project. I will focus on six issues raised by Hall�s text and then offer an alternative analysis rooted in a regulation- and state-theoretical political economy.

AB - Stuart Hall offers yet another of his well-known bravura diagnoses in this recent critique of New Labour. He argues that its essential character can be understood in Gramscian terms as a dynamic transformist expression of neoliberalism with a social democratic face. Like his earlier analyses of Thatcherism and New Labour, however, his analysis is stronger on critical discourse analysis and his own political rhetoric than it is on its grasp of political economy and its implications for political practice. Indeed it would be interesting to subject this text itself to a critical discourse analysis to demonstrate the theoretical lacunae and the conceptual slippages in its powerful, persuasive, but ultimately flawed, exploration of this latest transformist project. I will focus on six issues raised by Hall�s text and then offer an alternative analysis rooted in a regulation- and state-theoretical political economy.

KW - Stuart Hall

KW - new labour

M3 - Journal article

VL - 256

SP - 494

EP - 504

JO - Das Argument

JF - Das Argument

SN - 0004-1157

ER -