From: Jerry Levy (Gerald_A_Levy@MSN.COM)
Date: Tue Apr 25 2006 - 17:07:57 EDT
> The point remains that Neocleous emphasizes (and insists) > that he has clarified the meaning of the vampire > metaphor--that capital is undead as it appropriates > the sensuous energy of living labor. Rakesh, I don't see where he "emphasizes" and "insists" on that role. I couldn't find such a claim in "Bloody Capital and Dead Labour" or anything he wrote for the promotional material for his book or in the abstract of his _HPT_ article. What I did read in "Bloody Capital and Dead Labour" is his explanation that there is a long history and extensive literature of viewing the "vampire as capital" and "capital as vampire" in cultural studies literature. (Not all of the sources could be viewed since the working paper published on the Net didn't include the notes at the end of the paper.) This was important from the point of view of his article since the main thrust of it concerns the differing ways in which blood and capital are analyzed in different traditions of cultural studies vs. a critique of political economy. As interesting a topic as it may be, it has little direct bearing on the discussion we had in October, 2005. If there was to be a connection then it should have been raised in the discussion on Derrida's Specters since that's the closest we might have come to discussing cultural studies and postmodernist literature on ghosts, specters, and vampires. Since you a professional in the field of cultural studies and rhetoric, if there was anyone on the list who should have known about Neocleous's works it should have been you. In solidarity, Jerry
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