Reification is the process by which an idea is transformed into a thing. A useful metaphor for the effects of capitialism on society, it offers a materialist or physical explanation for a wide range of ideological phenomena from branding and national identity, to racial and sexual prejudice, to recent concepts like spin and globalization.

At a time when such phenomena define our world to an unprecedented degree, the concept of reification ought to enjoy greater currency than ever. Yet recent thinkers have expressed deep reservations about the concept and the term has become marginalized in the humanities and social sciences.

Eschewing this trend, Timothy Bewes opens up a new formulation of the theory, claiming that, in this highly reflective age of late capitalism, reification itself is inseparable from the anxiety people feel towards it. Drawing upon work by Lukács, Kierkegaard, Proust, and Melville, among others, he outlines a theory that promises to close the gap between politics and truth, art and experience, and philosophy and real life.

Timothy Bewes
has held teaching and research posts at universities including Liverpool John Moores, Southampton, North London, and Sussex. He is the author of Cynicism and Postmodernity, an editor of New Formations, and a contributor to New Left Review, New Literary History, and Parallax. His Cynicism and Postmodernity is also available from Verso.

Publication
November 2002

224 pages

Cloth
1 85984 685 8
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Paper
1 85984 456 1
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