
Rev Left Radio The Political Economy of Love: Attention, Affection, & What Capitalism Can't Buy
Jan 19, 2026
Kristen R. Ghodsee, a Professor specializing in feminist history and socialist studies, dives into her essay on love's political economy. She argues that love is not just a personal experience but essential for human flourishing, yet capitalism commodifies attention and affection. Ghodsee explores how loneliness is a societal issue, critiques the transactional nature of modern relationships, and advocates for a genuine politics of love. Their conversation highlights how community organizing can nurture reciprocal flow and proposes policies to promote love as a universal need.
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Love Has Use Value Not Just Feelings
- Love has a material "use value" essential to human flourishing, distinct from exchange value.
- Treating love as political economy reveals how capitalism deprives people of resources needed for love.
Organize To Fight Loneliness
- Join political organizing and mutual aid to build third spaces and reduce loneliness through meaningful collective work.
- Use organizing to form durable friendships that provide attention and care beyond transactional ties.
Three Building Blocks Of Love
- Love consists of attention, affection, and reciprocal flow, with the last resisting commodification.
- Capitalism commodifies attention and affection but devalues reciprocal, non-transactional flow.



