Description

Book Synopsis
This book is about the global crisis and the right to resistance, about neoliberal biopolitics and direct democracy, about the responsibility of intellectuals and the poetry of the multitude. Using Greece as an example, Douzinas argues that the persistent sequence of protests, uprisings and revolutions has radically changed the political landscape.

Trade Review
"Douzinas stands among the handful of academics who have seen a duty to use both their position and analytical skills to convey the message of resistance to an international audience. He cannot be commended enough."
Antipode

"Douzinas' writings form an exciting entry point into the critical theories that are coming to grips with the age we live in. By asking if another world is possible, Douzinas presents some hope that the rebellion against austerity is perhaps a sign of a more democratic and equitable Europe to come."
LSE Review of Books

"Solidarity with the hardships imposed on the Greek people by the agents of the financial capital is not enough - one has to start THINKING about Greece today. This is what Costas Douzinas does in Philosophy and Resistance in the Crisis - he treats Greece as a symptom of what is wrong in today's global capitalism, and as a lesson in how the people should resist the fate imposed on them by global capitalism. This is not a book about the exotic case of Greece - it is a book about all of us, which is why we all should also read it!"
Slavoj Zizek

“The lessons drawn here will be of interest to anyone who wants to bring about radical change. Whether readers agree with Douzinas' conclusions and ideas they cannot afford to ignore them.”
Red Pepper

"In a passionate revival of the classical concept of fearless speech, Douzinas offers a cri de coeur for intellectual engagement and ethical responsibility in the face of the Eurozone crisis. Counterposing Greek philosophy to the Greek statistics of the money managers he makes an urbane argument for rethinking the concept of Europe at the site of its original inception."
Peter Goodrich, Cardozo School of Law, New York

"Read this book. Douzinas opens a new terrain for critical theory, a much needed terrain in theses times of new insurgencies across the world. Beautifully written and carefully argued Douzinas offers us a profound rethinking of major concepts of critical theory as we now confront a new era of mass up risings."
Ducilla Cornell, Rutgers University

Table of Contents

Prologue: The age of resistance page 1

Part I Crisis

1 The Queen’s question 19

2 The biopolitics of pleasure and salvation 32

3 Anomie I: Social ethos and political cynicism 49

4 The crisis as spectacle 64

Part II Philosophy

5 Adikia: The eternal return of resistance 77

6 Anomie II: Disobedience, resistance, sovereignty 89

7 Political ontologies 107

8 People, multitude, crowd 119

Part III Resistance

9 Stasis Syntagma: The subjects and types of resistance 137

10 Demos in the square 155

11 Lessons of political strategy 176

Epilogue: The Europe to come 198

Notes 209

Index 224

Philosophy and Resistance in the Crisis

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Thu 25 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Costas Douzinas

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      View other formats and editions of Philosophy and Resistance in the Crisis by Costas Douzinas

      Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
      Publication Date: 10/05/2013
      ISBN13: 9780745665443, 978-0745665443
      ISBN10: 0745665446

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book is about the global crisis and the right to resistance, about neoliberal biopolitics and direct democracy, about the responsibility of intellectuals and the poetry of the multitude. Using Greece as an example, Douzinas argues that the persistent sequence of protests, uprisings and revolutions has radically changed the political landscape.

      Trade Review
      "Douzinas stands among the handful of academics who have seen a duty to use both their position and analytical skills to convey the message of resistance to an international audience. He cannot be commended enough."
      Antipode

      "Douzinas' writings form an exciting entry point into the critical theories that are coming to grips with the age we live in. By asking if another world is possible, Douzinas presents some hope that the rebellion against austerity is perhaps a sign of a more democratic and equitable Europe to come."
      LSE Review of Books

      "Solidarity with the hardships imposed on the Greek people by the agents of the financial capital is not enough - one has to start THINKING about Greece today. This is what Costas Douzinas does in Philosophy and Resistance in the Crisis - he treats Greece as a symptom of what is wrong in today's global capitalism, and as a lesson in how the people should resist the fate imposed on them by global capitalism. This is not a book about the exotic case of Greece - it is a book about all of us, which is why we all should also read it!"
      Slavoj Zizek

      “The lessons drawn here will be of interest to anyone who wants to bring about radical change. Whether readers agree with Douzinas' conclusions and ideas they cannot afford to ignore them.”
      Red Pepper

      "In a passionate revival of the classical concept of fearless speech, Douzinas offers a cri de coeur for intellectual engagement and ethical responsibility in the face of the Eurozone crisis. Counterposing Greek philosophy to the Greek statistics of the money managers he makes an urbane argument for rethinking the concept of Europe at the site of its original inception."
      Peter Goodrich, Cardozo School of Law, New York

      "Read this book. Douzinas opens a new terrain for critical theory, a much needed terrain in theses times of new insurgencies across the world. Beautifully written and carefully argued Douzinas offers us a profound rethinking of major concepts of critical theory as we now confront a new era of mass up risings."
      Ducilla Cornell, Rutgers University

      Table of Contents

      Prologue: The age of resistance page 1

      Part I Crisis

      1 The Queen’s question 19

      2 The biopolitics of pleasure and salvation 32

      3 Anomie I: Social ethos and political cynicism 49

      4 The crisis as spectacle 64

      Part II Philosophy

      5 Adikia: The eternal return of resistance 77

      6 Anomie II: Disobedience, resistance, sovereignty 89

      7 Political ontologies 107

      8 People, multitude, crowd 119

      Part III Resistance

      9 Stasis Syntagma: The subjects and types of resistance 137

      10 Demos in the square 155

      11 Lessons of political strategy 176

      Epilogue: The Europe to come 198

      Notes 209

      Index 224

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