Lifeblood
eBook - ePub

Lifeblood

Oil, Freedom, and the Forces of Capital

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Lifeblood

Oil, Freedom, and the Forces of Capital

About this book

If our oil addiction is so bad for us, why don’t we kick the habit? Looking beyond the usual culprits—Big Oil, petro-states, and the strategists of empire—Lifeblood finds a deeper and more complex explanation in everyday practices of oil consumption in American culture. Those practices, Matthew T. Huber suggests, have in fact been instrumental in shaping the broader cultural politics of American capitalism.

How did gasoline and countless other petroleum products become so central to our notions of the American way of life? Huber traces the answer from the 1930s through the oil shocks of the 1970s to our present predicament, revealing that oil’s role in defining popular culture extends far beyond material connections between oil, suburbia, and automobility. He shows how oil powered a cultural politics of entrepreneurial life—the very American idea that life itself is a product of individual entrepreneurial capacities. In so doing he uses oil to retell American political history from the triumph of New Deal liberalism to the rise of the New Right, from oil’s celebration as the lifeblood of postwar capitalism to increasing anxieties over oil addiction.

Lifeblood rethinks debates surrounding energy and capitalism, neoliberalism and nature, and the importance of suburbanization in the rightward shift in American politics. Today, Huber tells us, as crises attributable to oil intensify, a populist clamoring for cheap energy has less to do with American excess than with the eroding conditions of life under neoliberalism.

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Table of contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright Page
  3. Contents
  4. Introduction: Oil, Life, Politics
  5. 1. The Power of Oil? Energy, Machines, and the Forces of Capital
  6. 2. Refueling Capitalism: Depression, Oil, and the Making of “the American Way of Life”
  7. 3. Fractionated Lives: Refineries and the Ecology of Entrepreneurial Life
  8. 4. Shocked! “Energy Crisis,” Neoliberalism, and the Construction of an Apolitical Economy
  9. 5. Pain at the Pump: Gas Prices, Life, and Death under Neoliberalism
  10. Conclusion: Energizing Freedom
  11. Acknowledgments
  12. Notes
  13. Bibliography

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Yes, you can access Lifeblood by Matthew T. Huber in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Biological Sciences & North American History. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.