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My Aunt Sally, or, ‘our’ Keynes and the varieties of Keynesianism

Unable to properly address the full range of insight provided in the responses to ‘Keynes resurrected?’ in this reply I try to explain my motivations for the paper and situate its (several) problems in that larger context. I also speak specifically to the questions of Keynesianism’s relation to neo-...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Dialogues in human geography 2016-07, Vol.6 (2), p.162-169
Main Author: Mann, Geoff
Format: Article
Language:English
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Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:Unable to properly address the full range of insight provided in the responses to ‘Keynes resurrected?’ in this reply I try to explain my motivations for the paper and situate its (several) problems in that larger context. I also speak specifically to the questions of Keynesianism’s relation to neo-liberalism, to ‘deep democracy’, and to the limited political horizons suggested by the territorial imaginary that arguably underwrites the original article. I also try to better justify my claim that ‘Keynes is our Hegel’, by linking Keynesian reason to a broader intellectual and historical trajectory.
ISSN:2043-8206
2043-8214
DOI:10.1177/2043820616653286