- 1. Overview
- 2. Etymology
- 3. Cultural Impact
Fully Automated Luxury Communism: A Manifesto
Fully Automated Luxury Communism: A Manifesto is a 2019 nonâfiction book by Aaron Bastani that proposes a radical reâimagining of society through the lens of postâscarcity, postâcapitalist technological progress. The text situates itself at the intersection of Politics , socialism and technology , arguing that advances in automation, artificial intelligence and synthetic biology can eradicate material scarcity and reorganise social relations on egalitarian lines.
First edition
The first edition was published on 11 June 2019 by Verso Books in the United Kingdom. It appears in English and is classified under the genre Nonâfiction . The bookâs thematic focus includes:
The publication details are as follows:
- Publisher: Verso Books
- Publication date: 11 June 2019
- Publication place: United Kingdom
- Pages: 288
- ISBN: 978â1â78663â262â3
- OCLC: 1190904825
Synopsis
Bastani structures the argument around three broad epochs of technological transformation in human history:
- Prehistory to the dawn of Agriculture
- Agriculture to the Industrial Revolution
- The contemporary period, defined by the explosive spread of Information technology
He contends that the prosperity generated by these technological waves is fundamentally incompatible with the logic of Capitalism , which is built upon a paradigm of Scarcity . In Bastaniâs view, the emergence of abundant, technologyâmediated resources could dismantle this paradigm, enabling a future characterised by:
- Elimination of material scarcity
- Drastically reduced working hours
- Universal access to luxuries previously reserved for elites
The book situates this vision within the broader tradition of Marxism , seeking to reframe Socialism for the 21st century. Bastani advocates for a radical reorganisation of society grounded in Egalitarianism and sustained Technological change , envisioning a transition from capitalist realism to a postâcapitalist order where technology serves collective liberation rather than profit extraction.
Critical reception
The reception of Fully Automated Luxury Communism has been mixed, reflecting both enthusiasm for its ambitious scope and skepticism about its feasibility.
Andy Beckett of The Guardian described the work as âa short, dizzyingly confident bookâ that leaves readers either âexhilarated and energisedâ or âutterly baffledâ. While he acknowledged Bastaniâs âfaith in technologyâ and âguiltâfree enthusiasm for material goods,â he cautioned that the predictions rest on a âbroadâbrush reading of historyâă1â L1-L4ă.
Ville Kellokumpu in Society & Space argues that the manuscript underestimates the impact of Climate change and the continued dependence of contemporary industry on Fossil fuel , suggesting a potential blind spot in its optimistic prognosisă4â L1-L3ă.
Jason Barker contributes a review in the Los Angeles Review of Books , asserting that ecological destruction has historically accompanied technological transitions, and therefore the future may repeat this pattern unless mitigatedă5â L1-L3ă.
Mark Featherstone , writing for Theory, Culture & Society , praises the bookâs âutopian ambitionâ and its attempt to envision a society beyond Capitalist realism , yet criticises it for lacking âa theory of power, Class struggle , and revolution,â deeming it âlight on a theory of social changeâ and silent on the mechanics of transitionă6â L1-L4ă.
In openDemocracy , Oli Mould found the text âfull of hope,â noting that its âboundless utopianismâ is âinfectious,â while also warning that embracing such a vision demands âa little leap of faith from the readerâă7â L1-L3ă.
Annie Lowrey of The Atlantic considers Bastaniâs vision âcompellingâ and the term âuseful,â yet critiques his âtopsyâturvy understanding of recent history and the contemporary economy,â arguing that he fails to credit capitalismâs role in poverty reduction and neglects the significance of race and racism in shaping political dynamicsă8â L1-L4ă.
The critical discourse surrounding the book frequently invokes citation needed , reflecting ongoing debates about source reliability and scholarly rigour.