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Vite rubate: Dal sogno capitalista al futilitarismo

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È raro che un libro di economia ci parli in maniera così diretta, quasi intima, della nostra condizione esistenziale. Con sgomento il lettore scopre che la persona intrappolata in attività inutili, valutate solo in base al denaro che generano, è lui stesso. Sono nostre le sensazioni di precarietà e di isolamento che rendono coloro che ci circondano concorrenti o compratori dell’immagine posticcia che bisogna costruire per essere appetibili nel mercato del lavoro. Siamo noi l’Homo Futilitus, impegnato nel ruolo di direttore marketing del prodotto, anzi del brand, che ciascuno di noi è diventato e si ritrova costretto a vendere. Neil Vallelly ci conduce, con ricchezza di esempi che abbracciano epoche e paesi diversi, lungo il cammino che ci ha condotto al punto in cui siamo, dove ci sembra normale ciò che non lo è, dove tutte le colpe e le responsabilità sono addossate a noi invece che al sistema neoliberista, la cui atmosfera orwelliana ci rende difficile persino respirare. Un libro straordinario, specchio della nostra realtà, che dopo averci offerto un nuovo punto di vista sul concetto stesso di capitalismo, svelando così l’abisso in cui siamo stati gettati, ci mostra che una via d’uscita dal non futuro che ci è stato preparato esiste, che non siamo monadi, ma esseri che agendo insieme possono creare una comunità in cui conta non solo il proprio bene, ma il bene di tutti.

240 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 2021

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Neil Vallelly

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5 stars
9 (18%)
4 stars
27 (56%)
3 stars
10 (20%)
2 stars
2 (4%)
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
47 reviews1 follower
February 4, 2022
The book starts off as an interesting project examining what has happened to the utilitarian ideological theory developed by Jeremy Bentham, thanks to the neoliberal turn. Later on, however, I had the feeling that some chapters completely deviate from the original train of thought. There are two standalone chapters which I enjoyed to read (3 and 6).
126 reviews2 followers
June 13, 2022
Closer to a high 4 than a true 5 star rating. The conclusion aside from the last line felt like padding and a 80’s sales pitch ‘call to action’. Otherwise quite good

**Thoughts to follow**
Profile Image for Ryan.
73 reviews1 follower
January 25, 2025
I was originally planning to give this book a 1. Not because it’s of an objectively poor quality - it absolutely isn’t - but simply because I found the experience of reading it to be such a slog. This is not a breezy, pop-politics read. It’s an extremely academic book that reads like a philosophy thesis, and you need to go into it prepared for that. I don’t exactly recall how this book wound up on my reading list, but suffice it to say, I was not prepared.

If you’re at all familiar with the territory here, like I was, the first half of the book really drags because it’s essentially a dense historical review and you don’t immediately get a sense of where any of it is going or if the author’s ideas are going to be worth the time investment required to adequately preface them.

Ultimately, I’d say they were worth the investment. Had I started this book beginning with Chapter 3 - just 79 pages in, sure, but the complete book is only 183 long! - I’d have surely rated it a 4. There are some really interesting and novel ideas in here, and when the author hits his stride the book becomes much more readable. The author’s conception of futility (and semio-futility in particular) will absolutely stick with me.

If you decide to tackle this and feel like tapping out early on, I’d say skip ahead to Chapter 3 or 4 (or really any subsequent chapter with an appealing title) and see how you fare.
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1,401 reviews60 followers
September 29, 2022
Ottima riflessione sulle conseguenze del neo-liberismo, costruita con un preambolo che costruisce la storia di utilitarismo e liberismo e poi affronta i diversi aspetti del neologismo "futilitarismo" definito dall'autore. Un punto di vista che si installa bene fra Fisher, Han e l'italiano Ventura.
33 reviews
April 21, 2024
Opinionated and wordy, with some interesting concepts. A little all over the place with its premise and probably could have been edited for clarity.
Profile Image for Michael McCaughey.
71 reviews
April 2, 2022
So it turns out utilitarianism is a Scooby Doo villain and surprise it was Old Man Neoliberalism all along. The first half is a really good survey of utilitarianism: its origins, its development and examples of how the west has continually ignored its many, many economic failures. The second half is more a general, somewhat vague, criticism of neoliberalism. I'm a solidly average-brained smartnik (okay, lower-middle class in the brain suburbs), but I felt that the hypothesis of futilitarianism was never entirely fleshed out and the main focus of the book was showing how neoliberalism has ruined the world. Still, a good recommendation if you're looking for something trying to explain and solve how people are trapped in the meaninglessness of capitalism.
Profile Image for Joshua Friesen.
3,220 reviews3 followers
January 21, 2025
The editing-if there was any, made it difficult to read. It was all over the place. Bleak.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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