The Disobedient Society

Mat Little

We live in a time where obedience is considered a relic of the past. We tend to see ourselves as free agents who can voluntarily enter our personal relationships, family arrangements—and jobs—without being bound to them for life or subject to someone else’s authority.

The labor contract that we all enter in order to earn a living is essentially an agreement of obedience in exchange for wages. But as psychologist Stanley Milgram—the instigator of the famous “electric shock” experiments—discovered in the 1960s, obedience relies on free will. What neoliberalism has done is to camouflage obedience by reifying the labour contract as an undisputed part of the world.

In The Disobedient Society, Mat Little investigates the historical evolution of obedience, how increasing material abundance threatens the labour contract, and what a disobedient society might look like.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Mat Little (1969–) is a freelance journalist and editor who has written for Red Pepper, the New Statesman and the Guardian. He runs the blog We Are Not The Beautiful and writes extensively on markets, ideology and politics.


Language: English
Publisher: New Compass Press
Release year: 2019
Pages: 190 pages
Formats: Paperback
Print ISBN: 978-82-93064-55-8

Table of Contents:

Introduction
1. Obedience to Authority in the Era of Neoliberalism
2. Is Obedience Natural?
3. The “Free” Labourer and the Eclipse of Scarcity
4. The Disobedient Society

 

“Resting on the research of psychologist Stanley Milgram, Little draws a powerful connection between Milgram’s concept of obedience and contemporary capitalist labor markets. From this unique insight, he develops a passionate case for “the disobedient society” — that is, a radically democratic society that is free from both the tyranny of markets and the rule of professional politicians.”

Read the whole review on Roarmag

"The phrase “a disobedient society” might appear to be an oxymoron – in fact that’s why I employ it. To Stanley Milgram and many other others, society had to involve obedience. If obedience was absent, society couldn’t function. But that is precisely what I dispute. Obedience is unthinkingly following the instructions of people of higher status. It’s unknowing and irrational and involves deliberately closing your mind – an “alteration of attitude” as Milgram phrased it. But disobedience does not imply the end of discipline, coordination or episodic sovereignty. It does not mean anarchy in a pejorative sense. It merely involves the rational acceptance of temporary authority for agreed purposes."

Interview with Mat Little, in the New Compass magazine

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