Nick Srnicek
Canadian writer and academic (born 189) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nick Srnicek (born 1982)[2] is a Canadian writer and academic. He is currently a lecturer in Digital Economy in the Department of Digital Humanities, King's College London.[3] Srnicek is associated with the political theory of accelerationism and a post-scarcity economy.
Nick Srnicek | |
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![]() Srnicek in 2018 | |
Nationality | Canadian |
Education | |
Thesis | |
Philosophical work | |
Era | Contemporary philosophy |
Region | Western philosophy |
School | Continental philosophy Speculative realism[1] Accelerationism |
Main interests | Political philosophy |
Biography
Srnicek took a double major in Psychology and Philosophy[4] before completing an MA at the University of Western Ontario in 2007.[5] He proceeded to a PhD at the London School of Economics, completing his thesis in 2013 on "Representing complexity: the material construction of world politics".[6] He has worked as a Visiting Lecturer at City University and the University of Westminster.[7]
Bibliography
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- (ed., with Levi Bryant and Graham Harman), The Speculative Turn: Continental Materialism and Realism (Re.press, 2011), introduction at https://www.academia.edu/178033
- with Alex Williams, '#ACCELERATE: Manifesto for an accelerationist politics', in Dark Trajectories: Politics of the Outside, ed. by Joshua Johnson (New York: Name Publications, 2013), pp. 135–55, https://www.academia.edu/2379428
- with Alex Williams, 'On Cunning Automata: Financial Acceleration at the Limits of the Dromological', in Collapse 8, ed. by Robin MacKay (Windsor Quary, UK: Urbanomic, 2013), pp. 9–52, https://www.urbanomic.com/book/collapse-8/
- Srnicek, Nick; Alex Williams (2015). Inventing the future : postcapitalism and a world without work. London: Verso.
- Platform Capitalism (Polity, 2016)
- Hester, Helen and Nick Srnicek (2023) After Work: The Fight for Free Time. London: Verso.
- Critical studies and reviews of Srnicek's work
- Heller, Nathan (August 21, 2017). "Out of action : do protests work?". The Critics. A Critic at Large. The New Yorker. Vol. 93, no. 24. pp. 70–77.[8] Reviews Inventing the future.
- Lowrie, Ian (November 17, 2015). "On Algorithmic Communism". Los Angeles Review Of Books. Reviews Inventing the future.
References
External links
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