Read more
Informationen zum Autor David Ingram is Professor of Philosophy at Loyola University in Chicago. He is author of many books including Habermas and the Dialectic of Reason (1987), Critical Theory and Philosophy (1990), and Group Rights: Reconciling Equality and Difference (2000). Klappentext The Political is a collection of readings by the most important political philosophers representing the six major schools of Continental philosophy: Phenomenology, Existentialism, Critical Theory, Poststructuralism, Postmodernism, and Postcolonialism. Many of the selections, written by such notable thinkers as Arendt, Sartre, Habermas, Foucault, Lyotard, and Dussel, distill and exemplify the distinctive schools of Continental philosophy. Other selections, written by Iris Marion Young, Judith Butler, William McBride, Eduardo Mendieta, Simon Chambers, and David Ingram situate these primary readings in relation to their historical contexts and the contemporary world. These commentaries encompass issues such as global justice and the fate of the nation-state; the use of state-sanctioned violence; the impact of group rights and identity politics on democratic governance; the relationship between governance, normativity, and power in constituting and restricting freedom; the connection between universal rights and substantive democratic policies; and the dialectic between revolutionary practice and institutional regimentation. This is the first anthology of its kind devoted to emphasizing Continental political philosophy as an important area of study in its own right. Zusammenfassung This text is a collection of readings by the most important political philosophers representing the six major schools of continental philosophy: phenomenology! existentialism! critical theory! poststructuralism! postmodernism! and postcolonialism. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Contributors. Preface. Introduction (David Ingram) PART I. PHENOMENOLOGY: POLITICAL ACTION AND THE DIALECTIC OF POWER AND VIOLENCE. 1. Selections from The Human Condition. On Violence (Hannah Arendt) 2. Power! Violence! and Legitimacy: A Reading of Hannah Arendt in an Age of Police Brutality and Humanitarian Intervention (Iris Marion Young) PART II. EXISTENTIALISM: REVOLUTIONARY PRAXIS AND THE DIALECTIC OF GROUPS AND INSTITUTIONS. 3. Selections from Critique of Dialectical Reason (Jean-Paul Sartre) 4. Sartre's Critique (William L. McBride) PART III. CRITICAL THEORY: LIBERAL DEMOCRACY AND THE DIALECTIC OF INDIVIDUAL AND COMMUNITY. 5. Three Normative Models of Democracy. On the Internal Relation Between the Rule of Law and Democracy (Jurgen Habermas) 6. Can Procedural Democracy Be Radical (Simone Chambers) PART IV. POSTSTRUCTURALISM: MODERN POLITICAL VIRTUE AND THE DIALECTIC OF GOVERNANCE AND RESISTANCE. 7. What is Critique (Michel Foucault) 8. What is Critique? An Essay on Foucault's Virtue (Judith Butler) PART V. POSTMODERNISM: TOTALITARIANISM AND THE DIALECTIC OF IDENTITY AND DIFFERENCE. 9. Memorandum on Legitimation (Jean-Francois Lyotard) 10. Democracy in the Era of Identity Politics: Lyotard on Postmodern Legitimation (David Ingram) PART VI. POSTCOLONIALISM: PLANETARY POLITICS AND THE DIALECTIC OF LIFE AND LIBERATION. 11. Six Theses Towards a Critique of Political Reason: The Citizen as Political Agent (Enrique Dussel) 12. Politics in an Age of Planetarization: Enrique Dussel's Critique of Political Reason (Eduardo Mendieta) Index. ...