![]() ![]() ![]() In some ways reminiscent of Lauren Berlant’s work in Cruel Optimism, we find that the very thing that purports to offer us light is the very thing that causes us to be further bound to a system that ultimately drags us down.Īdditionally, we might consider how the neoliberal impulse mentioned in Duggan also manifests in reality television programs like House Hunters. Rather than support the idea that resources were adequate for broad-based public sharing of the fruits of prosperity, business activists promoted the idea that resources were scarce, and fierce competition among groups and individuals would be required to secure a comfortable life. ![]() Encapsulating a force that contributed to this shift, Dugan writes: Surveying the current landscape, however, we see that what once was bright has turned dark as both the housing industry and higher education have increasingly become privatized industries that are almost inextricably linked with debt. ![]() Following World War II, both education (in the form of a college degree) and a home were part of the democratic dream of the American citizen. Although the second chapter of Lisa Duggan’s The Twilight of Equality? focuses on an examination of neoliberalism’s campaigns in the culture wars, there is something profound about the choice to concentrate on education and housing as two domains of change in the latter half of the 20 th century. ![]()
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