Como Citar
Righi, A. (2017). The Mammoletta-Mammet complex and the sexed truth of neoliberal digitality. Soft Power, 4(8), 160–176. Recuperado de https://editorial.ucatolica.edu.co/index.php/SoftP/article/view/2469
##article.license##
Al enviar los artículos para su evaluación, los autores aceptan que transfieren los derechos de publicación a Soft Power. Revista Soft Power para su publicación en cualquier medio. Con el fin de aumentar su visibilidad, los documentos se envían a bases de datos y sistemas de indización, así mismo pueden ser consultados en la página web de la Revista.

Resumo

In this essay, I lay out a critique of neoliberal digitality from the vantage point of the thought of sexual difference. I consider the ways in which crowdworking platforms such as the Mechanical Turk micromanage digital living labor thus generating surplus value in the form of piece-work labor, rent, and increased scalability of the system. I then provide a discussion of the genealogy of Mechanical Turk demonstrating its clear sexed origins –what I identify as the mammet complex– as well as its relations to the sphere of reproduction. This forms the basis for a reconsideration of the potential for opposition that lurks in this model that I assemble by recapitulating key insights in Luisa Muraro’s considerations on what she calls the maternal continuum through a reading of Walter Benjamin.

##submission.citations.for##

Sistema OJS 3 - Metabiblioteca |