Description

Book Synopsis
This book brings together an ensemble of leading theorists and younger voices to explore new dimensions of Seyla Benhabib's thought across critical theory, feminism, and democratic theory, foregrounding the intricate relationship between critique and universality.

Trade Review
These rich and compelling essays testify not only to the breadth and brilliance of Seyla Benhabib's thought but also to her dialogism, mentorship, and influence. A marvelous collection! -- Nancy Fraser, author of Cannibal Capitalism: How Our System Is Devouring Democracy, Care, and the Planet—and What We Can Do About It
If there had not been sufficient proof so far of the enormous importance of Seyla Benhabib's political philosophy for understanding our present predicaments, this collection of articles offers it in abundance. Its contributions, ranging from moral psychology over political theory to postcolonial studies and written by eminent scholars within the different fields, discuss from very different perspectives Benhabib's idea that universalism can be situated and decentered by understanding it as a design for the never ending process of including ever more groups in the circle of those whose voices must be heard and respected. This is indispensable reading for everyone interested in contemporary political philosophy. -- Axel Honneth, author of Freedom’s Right: The Social Foundations of Democratic Life
This volume pays persuasive tribute to the power of Seyla Benhabib's compelling rethinking of the legacies of critical political theory. Concepts such as dialogical universalism, cosmopolitanism of codependence from below, democratic iterations, jurisgenerative politics and postnational sovereignty characterize her attempt to explore new normative grounds for political theory by thinking with and against Kant and Hegel, Arendt and Habermas in an age of migrations and the threat of new forms of neo-fascism across the world. -- Andreas Huyssen, author of Miniature Metropolis: Literature in an Age of Photography and Film
The accelerating impact of the Frankfurt School around the world owes much to gifted thinkers who demonstrate how a tradition can remain alive and open to the future through creative elaboration. No one exemplifies this process as powerfully as Seyla Benhabib, who has enriched critical theory with insights from feminism, postcolonial studies, democratic and human rights theory, and the writings of Hannah Arendt. As this stimulating collection of essays attests, she is more than a link in a single chain, but rather at the center of an expanding global network of critical thinkers who are grappling with the most urgent issues of our day. -- Martin Jay, author of Splinters in Your Eye: Frankfurt School Provocations
This wide-ranging and penetrating collection on the work of Seyla Benhabib, one of the most influential figures in the 'third generation' of critical theorists, is not only an important testimony to Benhabib's influence but also a significant contribution in its own right. With its wide range of topics, the volume should be of interest to scholars even beyond those primarily interested in Benhabib's own unique contributions. -- Kenneth Baynes, author of Habermas

Table of Contents
Preface
Introduction: In Search of Another Universalism, by Anna Jurkevics
Part I: Critique, Norm, and Utopia
1. Benhabib and Habermas on Discourse and Development, by Thomas McCarthy
2. Normativity and Reality: Toward a Critical and Realistic Theory of Politics, by Rainer Forst
3. Loss of World, Not Certainty: “Amor Mundi” and the Moral Psychology of Seyla Benhabib, by Carmen Lea Dege
4. Nature as a Concrete Other: An Alternative Voice in Kant’s Conception of Beauty and Dignity, by Umur Basdas
5. “To Burst Open the Possibilities of the Present”: Seyla Benhabib and Utopia, by Bernard E. Harcourt
Part II: Thinking With and Against Arendt
6. “Thinking With and Against” as Feminist Political Theory, by Patchen Markell
7. Arendt and Truth, by Gaye İlhan Demiryol
8. Understanding Eichmann and Anwar: Reenactment and the Psychic Lives of Perpetrators, by Sonali Chakravarti
Part III: Democratic Iterations and Cosmopolitanism
9. Democracy Without Shortcuts: An Institutional Approach to Democratic Legitimacy, by Cristina Lafont
10. Another Republicanism: Dissent, Institutions, and Renewal, by Christian Volk
11. Three Models of Communicative Cosmopolitanism, by Peter J. Verovšek
12. At the Borders of the Self: Democratic Iterations as a Theory of Postnational Sovereignty, by Paul Linden-Retek
Part IV: Jurisgenerativity
13. Back to the Future? Critical Theory and the Law, by William E. Scheuerman
14. The Unfinished Revolution: The Right to Have Rights and Birthright Citizenship, by Eduardo Mendieta
15. Genocide and Jurisgenesis, by Max Pensky
16. Jurisgenerativity in the Age of Big Data, by Matthew Longo
Part V: Deprovincializing Critical Theory
17. Pachamama’s Rights, Climate Crisis, and the Decolonial Cosmos, by Angélica María Bernal
18. What Is the Other in Seyla Benhabib’s Another Cosmopolitanism?, by Drucilla Cornell
19. Border Deaths as Forced Disappearances: Frantz Fanon and the Outlines of a Critical Phenomenology, by Ayten Gündoğdu
20. Gender Trouble: Manhood, Inclusion, and Justice in the Political Philosophy of Martin Luther King, Jr., by Shatema Threadcraft and Brandon M. Terry
Part VI: Philosophy and Friendship
21. Fragments of an Intellectual Autobiography, by Seyla Benhabib
22. Swimming, by Carolin Emcke
Contributors
Index

Another Universalism

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    £106.25

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    RRP £125.00 – you save £18.75 (15%)

    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Hardback by Stefan Eich, Anna Jurkevics, Nishin Nathwani


      View other formats and editions of Another Universalism by Stefan Eich

      Publisher: Columbia University Press
      Publication Date: 26/12/2023
      ISBN13: 9780231212786, 978-0231212786
      ISBN10: 023121278X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book brings together an ensemble of leading theorists and younger voices to explore new dimensions of Seyla Benhabib's thought across critical theory, feminism, and democratic theory, foregrounding the intricate relationship between critique and universality.

      Trade Review
      These rich and compelling essays testify not only to the breadth and brilliance of Seyla Benhabib's thought but also to her dialogism, mentorship, and influence. A marvelous collection! -- Nancy Fraser, author of Cannibal Capitalism: How Our System Is Devouring Democracy, Care, and the Planet—and What We Can Do About It
      If there had not been sufficient proof so far of the enormous importance of Seyla Benhabib's political philosophy for understanding our present predicaments, this collection of articles offers it in abundance. Its contributions, ranging from moral psychology over political theory to postcolonial studies and written by eminent scholars within the different fields, discuss from very different perspectives Benhabib's idea that universalism can be situated and decentered by understanding it as a design for the never ending process of including ever more groups in the circle of those whose voices must be heard and respected. This is indispensable reading for everyone interested in contemporary political philosophy. -- Axel Honneth, author of Freedom’s Right: The Social Foundations of Democratic Life
      This volume pays persuasive tribute to the power of Seyla Benhabib's compelling rethinking of the legacies of critical political theory. Concepts such as dialogical universalism, cosmopolitanism of codependence from below, democratic iterations, jurisgenerative politics and postnational sovereignty characterize her attempt to explore new normative grounds for political theory by thinking with and against Kant and Hegel, Arendt and Habermas in an age of migrations and the threat of new forms of neo-fascism across the world. -- Andreas Huyssen, author of Miniature Metropolis: Literature in an Age of Photography and Film
      The accelerating impact of the Frankfurt School around the world owes much to gifted thinkers who demonstrate how a tradition can remain alive and open to the future through creative elaboration. No one exemplifies this process as powerfully as Seyla Benhabib, who has enriched critical theory with insights from feminism, postcolonial studies, democratic and human rights theory, and the writings of Hannah Arendt. As this stimulating collection of essays attests, she is more than a link in a single chain, but rather at the center of an expanding global network of critical thinkers who are grappling with the most urgent issues of our day. -- Martin Jay, author of Splinters in Your Eye: Frankfurt School Provocations
      This wide-ranging and penetrating collection on the work of Seyla Benhabib, one of the most influential figures in the 'third generation' of critical theorists, is not only an important testimony to Benhabib's influence but also a significant contribution in its own right. With its wide range of topics, the volume should be of interest to scholars even beyond those primarily interested in Benhabib's own unique contributions. -- Kenneth Baynes, author of Habermas

      Table of Contents
      Preface
      Introduction: In Search of Another Universalism, by Anna Jurkevics
      Part I: Critique, Norm, and Utopia
      1. Benhabib and Habermas on Discourse and Development, by Thomas McCarthy
      2. Normativity and Reality: Toward a Critical and Realistic Theory of Politics, by Rainer Forst
      3. Loss of World, Not Certainty: “Amor Mundi” and the Moral Psychology of Seyla Benhabib, by Carmen Lea Dege
      4. Nature as a Concrete Other: An Alternative Voice in Kant’s Conception of Beauty and Dignity, by Umur Basdas
      5. “To Burst Open the Possibilities of the Present”: Seyla Benhabib and Utopia, by Bernard E. Harcourt
      Part II: Thinking With and Against Arendt
      6. “Thinking With and Against” as Feminist Political Theory, by Patchen Markell
      7. Arendt and Truth, by Gaye İlhan Demiryol
      8. Understanding Eichmann and Anwar: Reenactment and the Psychic Lives of Perpetrators, by Sonali Chakravarti
      Part III: Democratic Iterations and Cosmopolitanism
      9. Democracy Without Shortcuts: An Institutional Approach to Democratic Legitimacy, by Cristina Lafont
      10. Another Republicanism: Dissent, Institutions, and Renewal, by Christian Volk
      11. Three Models of Communicative Cosmopolitanism, by Peter J. Verovšek
      12. At the Borders of the Self: Democratic Iterations as a Theory of Postnational Sovereignty, by Paul Linden-Retek
      Part IV: Jurisgenerativity
      13. Back to the Future? Critical Theory and the Law, by William E. Scheuerman
      14. The Unfinished Revolution: The Right to Have Rights and Birthright Citizenship, by Eduardo Mendieta
      15. Genocide and Jurisgenesis, by Max Pensky
      16. Jurisgenerativity in the Age of Big Data, by Matthew Longo
      Part V: Deprovincializing Critical Theory
      17. Pachamama’s Rights, Climate Crisis, and the Decolonial Cosmos, by Angélica María Bernal
      18. What Is the Other in Seyla Benhabib’s Another Cosmopolitanism?, by Drucilla Cornell
      19. Border Deaths as Forced Disappearances: Frantz Fanon and the Outlines of a Critical Phenomenology, by Ayten Gündoğdu
      20. Gender Trouble: Manhood, Inclusion, and Justice in the Political Philosophy of Martin Luther King, Jr., by Shatema Threadcraft and Brandon M. Terry
      Part VI: Philosophy and Friendship
      21. Fragments of an Intellectual Autobiography, by Seyla Benhabib
      22. Swimming, by Carolin Emcke
      Contributors
      Index

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