Description

Book Synopsis
This book examines recent debates on the political dynamics of cosmopolitanism, particularly in its connection with European civil society and the public sphere. The aim of the volume is to trace to what extent cosmopolitanism corresponds to «second modernity», with the latter concept referring to the potential for consensus, the creation of multiple political alternatives and the recognition of otherness. The book accordingly explores questions about democratic legitimacy and the formation of social and political institutions and presents empirical research on phenomena such as global violence.
The volume is intended to constitute a cosmopolitan project in itself, comprising contributions from scholars with very diverse approaches. Together, these contributions provide a stimulating analysis of what cosmopolitanism can offer to socially and politically diverse twenty-first-century societies.

Table of Contents
Contents: Anastasia Marinopoulou: The Origins of the Second Modernity - Any Political Prospects? – Hauke Brunkhorst: Some Conceptual and Structural Problems of Global Cosmopolitanism – Piet Strydom: Cosmopolitization and the Prospects of a Cosmopolitan Modernity – Max Preglau: Cosmopolitanism and its Enemies: The Return of Nationalism - The Case of Austria – Manos Spyridakis: Cosmopolitan Possibilities and Ethnographic Realities in the Workplace: The Case of Struggling Employees in the Mass Media Sector – Robert Fine: Cosmopolitanism and Antisemitism: Two Faces of Universality – Tracey Skillington: Violence, Memory, Time: Towards a Cosmopolitan Model of Learning from Atrocity – Kevin McSorley: Cosmopolitanism and the Body – Anastasia Marinopoulou: Defining Cosmopolitanism: European Politics of the Twenty-First Century – Jens Greve: Differentiation, Class Formation and Elite-Network Structures in World Society.

Cosmopolitan Modernity

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    A Hardback by Anastasia Marinopoulou

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 29/06/2015
      ISBN13: 9783034308731, 978-3034308731
      ISBN10: 3034308736

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book examines recent debates on the political dynamics of cosmopolitanism, particularly in its connection with European civil society and the public sphere. The aim of the volume is to trace to what extent cosmopolitanism corresponds to «second modernity», with the latter concept referring to the potential for consensus, the creation of multiple political alternatives and the recognition of otherness. The book accordingly explores questions about democratic legitimacy and the formation of social and political institutions and presents empirical research on phenomena such as global violence.
      The volume is intended to constitute a cosmopolitan project in itself, comprising contributions from scholars with very diverse approaches. Together, these contributions provide a stimulating analysis of what cosmopolitanism can offer to socially and politically diverse twenty-first-century societies.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Anastasia Marinopoulou: The Origins of the Second Modernity - Any Political Prospects? – Hauke Brunkhorst: Some Conceptual and Structural Problems of Global Cosmopolitanism – Piet Strydom: Cosmopolitization and the Prospects of a Cosmopolitan Modernity – Max Preglau: Cosmopolitanism and its Enemies: The Return of Nationalism - The Case of Austria – Manos Spyridakis: Cosmopolitan Possibilities and Ethnographic Realities in the Workplace: The Case of Struggling Employees in the Mass Media Sector – Robert Fine: Cosmopolitanism and Antisemitism: Two Faces of Universality – Tracey Skillington: Violence, Memory, Time: Towards a Cosmopolitan Model of Learning from Atrocity – Kevin McSorley: Cosmopolitanism and the Body – Anastasia Marinopoulou: Defining Cosmopolitanism: European Politics of the Twenty-First Century – Jens Greve: Differentiation, Class Formation and Elite-Network Structures in World Society.

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