Citizen Subject : : Foundations for Philosophical Anthropology / / Étienne Balibar.

What can the universals of political philosophy offer to those who experience "the living paradox of an inegalitarian construction of egalitarian citizenship"? Citizen Subject is the summation of Étienne Balibar's career-long project to think the necessary and necessarily antagonistic...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter Fordham University Press Complete eBook-Package 2016
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Place / Publishing House:New York, NY : : Fordham University Press, , [2016]
©2016
Year of Publication:2016
Language:English
Series:Commonalities
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Physical Description:1 online resource (416 p.)
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Table of Contents:
  • Frontmatter
  • Contents
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: After the Controversy
  • Overture: Citizen Subject. Response to Jean- Luc Nancy's Question "Who Comes After the Subject?"
  • Annex: Subjectus/subjectum
  • Part I. "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 Dictum
  • 6. 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 III- Being of the Subject
  • 14. Bourgeois Universality and Anthropological Differences
  • Notes
  • Index