Peter Frase is an Editor at Jacobin magazine, a PhD candidate in sociology at the CUNY Graduate Center, and has written for In These Times and Al Jazeera. He lives in New York City.
This book is an exercise in public thinking as a political act, charting courses for movement-builders and citizens. In a project of that sort, a somewhat hysterical dystopia is worth the time of day. -- Jedediah Purdy * Los Angeles Review of Books * Frase injects a sorely needed dose of reality to the conversation, and the result is invigorating...I lost sleep over it. -- Ben Tarnoff * Guardian * Are the robots eating our jobs? Will technology set us free? These questions aren't new, but Frase's approach to answering them is refreshingly inventive. Four Futures is a thought-provoking work of political speculation. This incisive little book offers the vital reminder that nothing is set in stone-or silicon-and that in order to fight for a better world we first need to be able to imagine it. -- Astra Taylor, author of The People's Platform An engaging thought experiment on the intersection of technology and the environment. Indeed, as we ponder the interplay between digital abundance and physical scarcity, the digital industrialist solutions of most thinkers in this space pale in comparison to Frase's more open-minded, less deterministic understanding of the future unfolding before us. -- Douglas Rushkoff, author of Program or Be Programmed and Present Shock A remarkably clear-eyed view of the futures we're facing, bringing humor and intelligence to the lab of speculative fiction to create four smart and sharply lit early warning signals. -- Warren Ellis, author of Gun Machine and Transmetropolitan Brexit looms. Trump leers. Populism shouts. Reactionary politics casts long shadows. The right and left tear at themselves and stretch outwards. International tensions simmer. This seems like an appropriate moment for re-envisioning, and contributions to this process are arriving at some pace. Peter Frase's engaging short book Four Futures: Life After Capitalism is another addition to this collective reimagining. -- David Beer * OpenDemocracy * Frase deserves great credit for illuminating the possibilites our politics, technology, and environment now enable and constrain. Simultaneously entertaining and deep, Four Futures should inspire more 'social science fiction'. -- Frank Pasquale * Commonweal * Takes the practice of speculation and puts it to powerful use on the questions of automation and climate change. * Red Pepper * Frase's book provides a useful framework to think about life after capitalism. -- Adam Szetela * Cultural Logic: Marxist Theory and Practice *