
The Future of Futurity
Affective Capitalism and Potentiality in a Global City
Duke University Press
Published on 30. April 2025
Book
Hardback
328 pages
978-1-4780-2832-1 (ISBN)
Description
In The Future of Futurity, Purnima Mankekar and Akhil Gupta examine the lives and experiences of call center agents in India's business process outsourcing (BPO) industry, who live in Bengaluru and work for customers in the Global North. Mankekar and Gupta show how futurity-an affective-temporal potentiality and mode of being that emphasizes the unfolding of time-enables BPO workers to strive for hopeful futures despite their experiences of growing inequality, volatility, and violence. Drawing on long-term fieldwork with managers, owners, and workers of BPO companies, the authors explore how workers find pathways for navigating a globalized world and for imagining their futures in it. They point to the heterogeneous lives, yearnings, and anxieties of BPO workers, foregrounding the disjunctions and conjunctions between labor, corporeality, intimacy, family life, and mobility. Mankekar and Gupta show how workers' daily lives and imaginings of the future point to the relationships between futurity, capital, and technology as well as futurity's imbrications with contemporary racial capitalism. In so doing, the authors insist on the transformative potential of futurity even in conditions of extreme precarity.
Reviews / Votes
"What is it like to travel every night while staying firmly in place? What new affects and imaginaries emerge via laboring in the temporally upside-down life of an Indian call center? Purnima Mankekar and Akhil Gupta explore not only the fierce demands of such globally distributed labor but also the hopes and dreams of online workers seeking access to a radically reorganized life course. This remarkable book redefines anthropology for the twenty-first century." - Joseph Masco, author of (The Future of Fallout, and Other Episodes in Radioactive World-Making) "Mobilizing wide-ranging interdisciplinary inquiry and longue-durEe reflective ethnographic engagement, Purnima Mankekar and Akhil Gupta co-construct a compelling and innovative ethnography. They brilliantly theorize from their ethnography, effortlessly moving from analyses of business process outsourcing companies to stunning insights about time displacement and affect. The Futurity of Futurity is the work of two leading voices in anthropology who continue to be at the top of their game." - Karen Ho, author of (Liquidated: An Ethnography of Wall Street)More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
North Carolina
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Product notice
Cloth over boards
Illustrations
20 illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 155 mm
Width: 231 mm
Thickness: 28 mm
Weight
612 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4780-2832-1 (9781478028321)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Purnima Mankekar is Professor in the Departments of Anthropology, Asian American Studies, Gender Studies, and Film, TV, and Digital Media at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Akhil Gupta is Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Akhil Gupta is Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Content
Foreword / Llerena Guiu Searle and Kathryn Mariner ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Disjunctive Temporalities, Discrepant Futures 1
1. Mobility, Emplacement, Translation 47
2. Shopping Malls as Infrastructures of Aspirations: Learning to Labor in Spaces of Leisure 100
3. Intimacies at Work 137
4. The Missed Period: Disjunctive Temporalities, Embodiment, and the Work of Capital 179
Conclusion. Potentiality and Future Tense 222
Notes 243
References Cited 267
Index
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: Disjunctive Temporalities, Discrepant Futures 1
1. Mobility, Emplacement, Translation 47
2. Shopping Malls as Infrastructures of Aspirations: Learning to Labor in Spaces of Leisure 100
3. Intimacies at Work 137
4. The Missed Period: Disjunctive Temporalities, Embodiment, and the Work of Capital 179
Conclusion. Potentiality and Future Tense 222
Notes 243
References Cited 267
Index