Specters of Liberation: Great Refusals in the New World OrderState University of New York Press, 19.03.1998 - 360 Seiten Specters of Liberation argues that dissent against the New World Order is possible through a collaboration of critical postmodern social theory and existential philosophy. It integrates those Western, Eastern European, and postcolonial approaches to democratic theory that provide the best alternatives to today's nationalist and racial conflicts and offer the best prospects for a free world. Rigorously argued and written in an impassioned voice, it examines multidimensional specters of liberation and resources for democratic change after 1989. Inspired by the persistence of the Marcusean Great Refusal, Matustik takes up a wide variety of issues, ranging from the encounter between critical social theory and existential philosophy found in the works of Herbert Marcuse to the contributions of Czech existential phenomenology to democratic theory, with attention to the works of Havel. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 92
Seite 2
... Habermas's opus . A widely circulated view prevails that Habermas jettisons the methodology of existential phenomenology in the process of adopting the full linguistic - communication turn . Haber- mas's existential leanings can be ...
... Habermas's opus . A widely circulated view prevails that Habermas jettisons the methodology of existential phenomenology in the process of adopting the full linguistic - communication turn . Haber- mas's existential leanings can be ...
Seite 3
... Habermas's position indicate that to view the Habermas - Taylor exchanges as a genre of the liberal - communitarian debate pure and sim- ple is unhelpful . ( E.g. , liberals hold out for individual rights and com- munitarians for the ...
... Habermas's position indicate that to view the Habermas - Taylor exchanges as a genre of the liberal - communitarian debate pure and sim- ple is unhelpful . ( E.g. , liberals hold out for individual rights and com- munitarians for the ...
Seite 4
... Habermas agree that there are no unsocialized selves with private words for I or Self . Such words and our competence for recognizing and communicating them to ourselves and others are generated in one's individualization through ...
... Habermas agree that there are no unsocialized selves with private words for I or Self . Such words and our competence for recognizing and communicating them to ourselves and others are generated in one's individualization through ...
Seite 5
... Habermas articulates this insight formally under procedural morality . For Taylor , discursively available goods provide a concrete corrective to the procedural priority of individual rights . Dominant goods , and not procedures ...
... Habermas articulates this insight formally under procedural morality . For Taylor , discursively available goods provide a concrete corrective to the procedural priority of individual rights . Dominant goods , and not procedures ...
Seite 6
... Habermas's discourse model an ally , not a foe of multicultural democracy . The discourse model of democracy is better fit to collaborate with differential justice than " Liberalism 1. " On this point there remains little to separate ...
... Habermas's discourse model an ally , not a foe of multicultural democracy . The discourse model of democracy is better fit to collaborate with differential justice than " Liberalism 1. " On this point there remains little to separate ...
Inhalt
1 | |
Dissenting Individuals | 25 |
Multicultural Enlightenment | 49 |
Specters of Deconstruction and Critical Theory | 65 |
Hope and Refusal | 97 |
Communities in Resistance | 127 |
Clowning and Refusal | 165 |
Ski Masks and Velvet Faces | 197 |
Radical Multicultural and Existential Democracy | 227 |
Notes | 267 |
Works Cited | 313 |
Index | 345 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Specters of Liberation: Great Refusals in the New World Order Martin J. Beck Matustik,Martin Beck Matu tík Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1998 |
Specters of Liberation: Great Refusals in the New World Order Martin Beck Matu tík,Martin Joseph Matustik,Martin Joseph Matu tík Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1998 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adorno aesthetics agency authenticity autonomy become Benhabib borders Butler chap citations civil claims Clash communitarian concrete critical social theory critical theory critique cultural Czech deconstruction deliberative democracy democ Derrida dialectic dimensions discourse dissenting individuals domination economic enlightenment ethical European exis existence existential democracy existentially material Fanon fascism Feminism formal forms Foucault gender genealogy global Habermas Habermas's Havel Hegel Herbert Marcuse historical Honneth hope human ical ideal identity and difference institutions justice Kierkegaard lifeworld Marcuse Marcuse's Marcusean margins Marx mask Matuštík McLaren modern moral multicultural nation-state nationalist neoliberal normative one-dimensional one's ontology oppression performative perpetual peace Philosophy politics of difference postcolonial postmodern Prague praxis procedural race racial racism radical multicultural radically democratic reciprocity refusals resistance revolution revolutionary Sartre Sartre's self-choice singular universal sociopolitical solidarity specters of liberation struggles Taylor tential textual theorists tion traditions trans transgressions uncritical undecidability Velvet Revolution