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Humanization as Money: Modern Monetary Theory and the Critique of Race

American Liberty One Ounce 225th Anniversary (US Mint) Gold Coin 2017. Minted at West Point.

American Liberty One Ounce 225th Anniversary (US Mint) Gold Coin 2017. Minted at West Point.

Authors: Diren Valayden & Jakob Feinig

In this article, Professors Valayden and Feinig build on the work of Frantz Fanon and Paulo Freire to develop a relational understanding of dehumanization and humanization through money. They first show that Fanon and Freire share a critical normative vision of humanization, which they conceptualize as that which occurs when people reject dehumanizing practices that deny their agency, begin to grasp their world-in-common, and emerge as historical agents who remake it. In a second step, Professors Valayden and Feinig advance Fanon’s and Freire’s vision by identifying the constitutive and dehumanizing role of money in liberalism’s ontological commitments, and develop a humanizing monetary ontology. They show how John Locke’s theory of “monetary individualism” is also a monetary theory of race that constitutes the liberal ontology and propose an approach to humanization grounded in Modern Monetary Theory (MMT).

Diren Valayden & Jakob Feinig, “Humanization as Money: Modern Monetary Theory and the Critique of Race” Humanity: An International Journal of Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and Development (Volume 13, Number 2, Summer 2022): 146-157, https://muse.jhu.edu/article/864472.

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