Citizen Subject : Foundations for Philosophical Anthropology /
This book constitutes the summation of Étienne Balibar's career-long project to think the necessary and necessarily antagonistic relation between the categories of citizen and subject.
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés Francés |
Publicado: |
New York, NY :
Fordham University Press,
2017.
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Half-title; Title; Copyright; Contents; Foreword; Introduction: After the Controversy; Overture: Citizen Subject. Response to Jean-Luc Nancy's Question "Who Comes After the Subject?"; Annex: Subjectus/subjectum; PartssI. "Our True Self Is Not Entirely Within Us"; 1. "Ego sum, ego existo": Descartes on the Verge of Heresy; 2. "My Self," "My Own": Variations on Locke; 3. Aimances in Rousseau: Julie or The New Heloise as Treatise on the Passions; 4. From Sense Certainty to the Law of Genre: Hegel, Benveniste, Derrida; Part II. Being(s) in Common.
- 5. Ich, das Wir, und Wir, das Ich ist: Spirit's Dictum6. The Messianic Moment in Marx; 7. Zur Sache Selbst: The Common and the Universal in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit; 8. Men, Armies, Peoples: Tolstoy and the Subject of War; 9. The Social Contract Among Commodities: Marx and the Subject of Exchange; Part III. The Right to Transgression; 10. Judging Self and Others: On the Political Theory of Reflexive Individualism; 11. Private Crime, Public Madness; 12. The Invention of the Superego: Freud and Kelsen, 1922; 13. Blanchot's Insubordination: On the Writing of the Manifesto of the 121.
- Part IV. The Ill-Being of the Subject14. Bourgeois Universality and Anthropological Differences; Notes; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; I; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R; S; T; V; W; Z.