Collectif
Nouvelle parution
W. Montag & H. Elsayed, Balibar and the Citizen Subject

W. Montag & H. Elsayed, Balibar and the Citizen Subject

Publié le par Marc Escola (Source : hanan elsayed)

Référence bibliographique : Warren Montag & Hanan Elsayed, Balibar and the Citizen Subject. Edinburgh University Press, 2017.Pages: 345., Edinburgh University Press, collection "Critical connections", 2017. EAN13 : 9781474404211.

 

This collection explores Balibar’s rethinking of the connections between subjection and subjectivity by tracing the genealogies of these concepts in their discursive history. The 12 essays provide an overview of Balibar’s work after his collaboration with Althusser. They explain and expand his framework; in particular, by restoring Arabic and Islamic thought to the conversation on the citizen subject. The collection includes two previously untranslated essays by Balibar himself on Carl Schmitt and Thomas Hobbes.

 

Introduction: Balibar and the Citizen Subject
Warren Montag and Hanan Elsayed

Part I: Balibar Reading Schmitt Reading Hobbes: Equality or Sameness?

1. Schmitt’s Hobbes, Hobbes’s Schmitt
Etienne Balibar

2. The Mortal God and his Faithful Subjects: Hobbes, Schmitt and the Antinomies of Secularism
Etienne Balibar

Part II: Transindividual / Universal

1. The ‘Other Scene’ of Political Anthropology: Between Transindividuality and Equaliberty
Jason Read

2. Intersubjectivity or Transindividuality: The Leibniz-Spinoza Alternative
Vittorio Morfino

3. A Parallelism of Consciousness and Property: Balibar's Reading of Locke
Warren Montag

4. Figures of Universalism: Notes on Philosophy and Politics in Etienne Balibar
Mohamed Moulfi

5. Balibar and the Philosophy of Science
Giorgos Fourtounis

Part III: Inequality, Violence and the Possibility of Citizenship

6. La Haine: Falling in Slow Motion
Hanan Elsayed

7. Morbid Perseverance: The Internal Border and White Supremacy
James Ford

8. Just like a woman: Balibar on the politics of reproduction
Nancy Armstrong

9. Another "Neo-Racism": Balibar and the Everywhere War, 
Mike Hill