Neoliberalism and Contemporary American Literature

Jelly-Schapiro Note 48

The Spanish boom of the early 1990s was concentrated in cities such as Barcelona and Seville; “all the money,” Esteban observes, “flowed down those two great drains” (246). The cities themselves, though, are not simply sites of generalized prosperity, but spaces wherein the contradictions of capital are clarified and contested. The absorption of the surplus through urbanization, as David Harvey highlights, has always depended upon processes of “creative destruction” that evict and degrade the city’s poorer residents. In the city, in other words, the intimacy of expanded reproduction and accumulation by fabrication is brought into stark relief. And it precisely this intimacy, and the inequities of its effects, that the Indignados are resisting.

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