Kapoor's books,
Confronting Desire: Psychoanalysis and International Development (2020) and
Psychoanalysis and the GlObal (2018), investigate how the unconscious "speaks out" in various guises: from obsessions about growth and poverty to the perverse seductions of racism and over-consumption, from disavowal of the climate crisis to the social and cultural traumas engendered by globalization. For Kapoor, the unpredictability and excess of unconscious desire are not only the source of "irrationality" but also a political resource for breaking out of the global capitalist status quo. He examines, for example, the political and psychoanalytic bases of revolutionary movements such as the
Arab Spring. Kapoor's book
Universal Politics (2021), co-authored with
Zahi Zalloua, argues for a negative universality rooted in social antagonism (shared experiences of marginalization) and envisions a common solidarity of the excluded. For the authors, such a conception of universality avoids the trap of neocolonial universalism and the narrow particularism of identity politics. The book examines what a universal politics could look like in such key current global sites of struggle as
climate change, workers' struggles, the Palestinian question, the refugee crisis,
Black Lives Matter, #MeToo, political Islam, Morales's universalist state in Bolivia, the
European Union, and
COVID-19. Kapoor's 2023 co-authored book,
Global Libidinal Economy, is the first to examine international political economy with a psychoanalytic lens. The book focuses on key political economy categories such as consumption, production, trade, financialization, and ecology, claiming for example that consumption is not only a way of satisfying a need but aimed at soothing a deeply held sense of loss; or that capital is accompanied by unconscious "drive" that seduces and beguiles in the service of endless profit-making. The book also examines the gender and racial dimensions of global political economy, suggesting that unconscious desire/enjoyment of domination is integral to
capital accumulation. Kapoor's 2024 co-authored book,
Rethinking Development Politics, examines development politics with a psychoanalytic lens, reassessing it in relation to
Modernization, Postdevelopment/Decoloniality, and Marxist
political economy. The book distinguishes the psychoanalytic approach from the latter schools of thought by focusing on present-day case studies, including digital and green modernization,
trade, neo
populism, anti-racist training, and radical politics in Iran's
Women, Life, Freedom movement. == Recognition & Awards ==