Amway as Neoliberal Religious Tradition

Why do people desire their own continued oppression under neoliberalism? This essay seeks an answer to this confounding question through analysis of the Amway organization, an American multi-level-marketing (MLM) company that rose to a multi-billion dollar value in the 1980s and 90s. My argument is...

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Main Author: Michael Laminack
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-08-01
Series:Religions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/9/703
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spelling doaj-c27be9430a4943bab7425b27a7e520232021-09-26T01:12:51ZengMDPI AGReligions2077-14442021-08-011270370310.3390/rel12090703Amway as Neoliberal Religious TraditionMichael Laminack0Iliff School of Theology, University of Denver, Denver, CO 80208, USAWhy do people desire their own continued oppression under neoliberalism? This essay seeks an answer to this confounding question through analysis of the Amway organization, an American multi-level-marketing (MLM) company that rose to a multi-billion dollar value in the 1980s and 90s. My argument is that Amway serves as a prime case study for the relation between neoliberalism and religious practices––people desire their continued oppression under neoliberalism in part because neoliberalism bears meaning at the level of culture and religion. What sets Amway apart from other MLMs, and makes Amway a prime case study for neoliberalism and religious practices, is its amalgamation of neoliberal ideology with ideas and trends from American evangelicalism, to the extent that it serves as a kind of neoliberal religious tradition. As this amalgamation demonstrates, people may defend neoliberalism with a similar fervor as defending cultural or religious traditions. The conclusion explores the possibility of a decolonial American evangelicalism, which would seek options for broadening the horizons of American evangelicalism beyond the relationship to neoliberalism and the possibility of a critical theology robust enough to thoughtfully critique neoliberalism. In pursuit of this thesis, the essay utilizes a theoretical framework guided by the contributions of scholars including Wendy Brown, Walter Benjamin, Olivier Roy, Walter Mignolo, and Carl Raschke in order to analyze Amway through the lens of contemporary political theories of neoliberalism.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/9/703neoliberalismAmwaydecolonizationcritical theologyfundamentalismpolitical theory
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Laminack
spellingShingle Michael Laminack
Amway as Neoliberal Religious Tradition
Religions
neoliberalism
Amway
decolonization
critical theology
fundamentalism
political theory
author_facet Michael Laminack
author_sort Michael Laminack
title Amway as Neoliberal Religious Tradition
title_short Amway as Neoliberal Religious Tradition
title_full Amway as Neoliberal Religious Tradition
title_fullStr Amway as Neoliberal Religious Tradition
title_full_unstemmed Amway as Neoliberal Religious Tradition
title_sort amway as neoliberal religious tradition
publisher MDPI AG
series Religions
issn 2077-1444
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Why do people desire their own continued oppression under neoliberalism? This essay seeks an answer to this confounding question through analysis of the Amway organization, an American multi-level-marketing (MLM) company that rose to a multi-billion dollar value in the 1980s and 90s. My argument is that Amway serves as a prime case study for the relation between neoliberalism and religious practices––people desire their continued oppression under neoliberalism in part because neoliberalism bears meaning at the level of culture and religion. What sets Amway apart from other MLMs, and makes Amway a prime case study for neoliberalism and religious practices, is its amalgamation of neoliberal ideology with ideas and trends from American evangelicalism, to the extent that it serves as a kind of neoliberal religious tradition. As this amalgamation demonstrates, people may defend neoliberalism with a similar fervor as defending cultural or religious traditions. The conclusion explores the possibility of a decolonial American evangelicalism, which would seek options for broadening the horizons of American evangelicalism beyond the relationship to neoliberalism and the possibility of a critical theology robust enough to thoughtfully critique neoliberalism. In pursuit of this thesis, the essay utilizes a theoretical framework guided by the contributions of scholars including Wendy Brown, Walter Benjamin, Olivier Roy, Walter Mignolo, and Carl Raschke in order to analyze Amway through the lens of contemporary political theories of neoliberalism.
topic neoliberalism
Amway
decolonization
critical theology
fundamentalism
political theory
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1444/12/9/703
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