Writing our way to sustainable economies? How academic sustainability writing engages with capitalism

Journal article by Simon Mair
Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space | July 2022

Image: courtesy of Annie Spratt / unsplash.com

Summary

In this essay, CUSP researcher Simon Mair explores the ways that academic sustainability writing engages with economic systems and considers the performative effects of these modes of engagement.

Through the mapping of academic sustainability writing, and setting out the lens of Capitalist Realism and Capitalocentrism, he defines three mechanisms by which non-capitalist futures are foreclosed: 1) Actively Recreating Capitalism—where industries like advertising actively seek to recreate and reinforce capitalist values. 2) Capitalism Unseen—where capitalism is perceived as natural and synonymous with all economic forms. 3) Making a Monolith of Capitalism—where anti-capitalist writers focus so much on capitalism that they make it appear undefeatable.

Examining the frequency of different terms used by academic sustainability writers when talking about economic systems, and looking at two different uses of the term ‘capital’, Simon Mair argues that academic sustainability writers engage with and are influenced by these mechanisms in different ways.

Currently, there is a substantive body of academic sustainability writing that contributes to Capitalism Unseen. However, there are also strands of work that emphasise discontinuity and change within economic systems. He argues that such work provides a model for escaping the reinforcing mechanisms.

The paper is available in open access format via the SAGE journals website. If you have difficulties accessing the paper, please get in touch: info@cusp.ac.uk.

Citation

Mair S 2022. Writing our way to sustainable economies? How academic sustainability writing engages with capitalism. Environment and Planning A: Economy and Space. July 2022. doi:10.1177/0308518X221114138

Further Reading