Description

Book Synopsis
This book examines how distinctive liberalisms respond to human diversity. It reconstructs Immanuel Kant's and John Stuart Mill's treatments of racial, cultural, and gender-based difference to understand how two of the tradition's leading figures reacted to pluralism, and what contemporary readers might draw from them.

Trade Review
'Liberalism, Diversity, and Domination is a truly innovative take on European political theory's historical entanglements with empire. Marwah combines conceptual and contextual approaches to the history of political thought with a sympathetic attention to anti- and postcolonial criticism and a simultaneous unwillingness to abandon the promise of liberalism as an open and receptive political vision. The result is a compelling re-reading of John Stuart Mill's political theory that challenges the predominant tendency to dismiss his work as inescapably flawed by empire while also calling for greater reflection on the problems and possibilities of liberalism.' Jeanne Morefield, Whitman College, Washington
'Inder S. Marwah offers a defense - at once passionate and qualified - of Millian liberalism as a valuable ethos for modern pluralistic societies, even as he takes stock of John Stuart Mill's own imperial commitments. This book is a useful provocation and a thoughtful, carefully argued, and independent-minded work of scholarship.' Jennifer Pitts, University of Chicago
'In this brilliant intervention in the liberalism/postcolonialism debate, Inder S. Marwah defends two shocking (for the conventional wisdom) theses: that liberalism can indeed be retrieved for an anti-colonial project, but that John Stuart Mill - rather than Immanuel Kant - should be the Western figure revised and rehabilitated as an ally for the Global South. Canvassing a truly remarkable wealth of both primary and secondary literature, while developing an incisive line of argumentation of its own, this courageous and iconoclastic book will immediately become required reading for anybody interested in the past half-century's controversies on these issues.' Charles Mills, City University of New York
'Marwah's readings of Kant and Mill are broad and deep, connecting works on history and anthropology with those on ethics and politics.' D. C. Kolb, Choice
'This is a highly important debate and this carefully researched and well-crafted work is a worthy contribution to it. It is worth the investment of time for anyone interested in liberalism, its history, and its relation to difference.' Vince Bagnulo, The Review of Politics
'This is an important book and a necessary read for specialists of Kant's early intellectual development.' Courtney D. Fugate, Journal of the History of Philosophy

Table of Contents
1. Introduction; 2. Unbending crooked timber; 3. Difference, diversity and exclusion; 4. Democratic character and the affective grounds of politics; 5. Complicating barbarism and civilization; 6. Millian liberalism; 7. Epilogue.

Liberalism Diversity and Domination

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    A Hardback by Inder S. Marwah

    15 in stock


      View other formats and editions of Liberalism Diversity and Domination by Inder S. Marwah

      Publisher: Cambridge University Press
      Publication Date: 23/05/2019
      ISBN13: 9781108493789, 978-1108493789
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book examines how distinctive liberalisms respond to human diversity. It reconstructs Immanuel Kant's and John Stuart Mill's treatments of racial, cultural, and gender-based difference to understand how two of the tradition's leading figures reacted to pluralism, and what contemporary readers might draw from them.

      Trade Review
      'Liberalism, Diversity, and Domination is a truly innovative take on European political theory's historical entanglements with empire. Marwah combines conceptual and contextual approaches to the history of political thought with a sympathetic attention to anti- and postcolonial criticism and a simultaneous unwillingness to abandon the promise of liberalism as an open and receptive political vision. The result is a compelling re-reading of John Stuart Mill's political theory that challenges the predominant tendency to dismiss his work as inescapably flawed by empire while also calling for greater reflection on the problems and possibilities of liberalism.' Jeanne Morefield, Whitman College, Washington
      'Inder S. Marwah offers a defense - at once passionate and qualified - of Millian liberalism as a valuable ethos for modern pluralistic societies, even as he takes stock of John Stuart Mill's own imperial commitments. This book is a useful provocation and a thoughtful, carefully argued, and independent-minded work of scholarship.' Jennifer Pitts, University of Chicago
      'In this brilliant intervention in the liberalism/postcolonialism debate, Inder S. Marwah defends two shocking (for the conventional wisdom) theses: that liberalism can indeed be retrieved for an anti-colonial project, but that John Stuart Mill - rather than Immanuel Kant - should be the Western figure revised and rehabilitated as an ally for the Global South. Canvassing a truly remarkable wealth of both primary and secondary literature, while developing an incisive line of argumentation of its own, this courageous and iconoclastic book will immediately become required reading for anybody interested in the past half-century's controversies on these issues.' Charles Mills, City University of New York
      'Marwah's readings of Kant and Mill are broad and deep, connecting works on history and anthropology with those on ethics and politics.' D. C. Kolb, Choice
      'This is a highly important debate and this carefully researched and well-crafted work is a worthy contribution to it. It is worth the investment of time for anyone interested in liberalism, its history, and its relation to difference.' Vince Bagnulo, The Review of Politics
      'This is an important book and a necessary read for specialists of Kant's early intellectual development.' Courtney D. Fugate, Journal of the History of Philosophy

      Table of Contents
      1. Introduction; 2. Unbending crooked timber; 3. Difference, diversity and exclusion; 4. Democratic character and the affective grounds of politics; 5. Complicating barbarism and civilization; 6. Millian liberalism; 7. Epilogue.

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