![]() Klein revisits old and newer events such as the Pinochet coup and Chile (Chapters z and 3), China and Poland (Chapter 9), South Africa (Chapter 10), Russia (Chapters 11 and 12), Asia (Chapter 13), Bolivia (Chapter 7), the USA (throughout the book) and New Orleans, post Hurricane Katrina (Chapter 20), Iraq (Chapters 16 to 18) and the UK (Chapter 6). This includes a wider look at environmental issues, and the experience of this by and within capitalism and capitalists, and by the multitude. Fear and tragedy are in the news and in people's consciousness, and Klein here looks at capitalist reproduction and development of our time. Klein, as a journalist, can identify a good story, and The Shock Doctrine does grab the zeitgeist of recent years, producing a compelling critique of capitalist practice. The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, which is the authentic sequel to No Logo. Recently, there has been a new publication, The Shock Doctrine. Exploiting her newfound prestige, she produced various other articles and books, including Fences and Windows, but the latter was merely soundbite politics. ![]() ISBN: 9780141024530 (pbk) 9 Īt the time, with No Logo, many in the media thought that Naomi Klein had written the bible of the new globalised social movement, and Klein made a worldwide name for herself describing the new branded age and international division of labour on the back of this new movement. The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism ![]()
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