Description
Book SynopsisClayton Chin presents a critical reconstruction of the work of Richard Rorty that argues that that Rorty provides us with unrecognized tools for resolving key foundational issues. The Practice of Political Theory is an important response to the vexed questions of justification and pluralism.
Trade ReviewRichard Rorty, says Clayton Chin, was first deployed as a foil by critical theory, then rejected, and finally ignored. It is time now to reinvent Rorty, paying special attention to his later work in relation to other traditions. This is a thoughtful, timely, and closely articulated study. It commands close attention from those who will embrace it and those who may contest some of its claims. -- William E. Connolly, author of
Aspirational Fascism: The Struggle for Multifaceted Democracy Under TrumpismRichard Rorty stirred his theoretical milieu by combining postfoundational philosophy with a commitment to traditional liberalism. His provocation remains poignant in our current moment, when continental-inflected postfoundational thought finds itself tarrying again with materialism and ontology to save its political radicalism. Clayton Chin’s compelling and important book shows how Rorty’s thought offers an inclusive ethos for pluralistic democracies, and without pretending that unifying philosophical theory can do for us what only political activity can accomplish. -- Colin Koopman, author of
Pragmatism as Transition: Historicity and Hope in James, Dewey, and RortyThe Practice of Political Theory seeks to think critically about the political-philosophical contribution of Richard Rorty. Chin rightly attends to the limitations and untapped possibilities of Rorty’s work, understood as a contribution to 'cultural politics,' and therefore aims to undercut those criticisms of Rorty’s work that downplay his substantive contributions to political-philosophical thinking. In doing so, the book reads Rorty as helping us side-step debates around foundationalism and justification in political theorizing in favor of a situated mode of thinking that does not dispense with normative assessment. -- Melvin Rogers, author of
The Undiscovered Dewey: Religion, Morality, and the Ethos of DemocracyThe Practice of Political Theory is both an excellent reconstruction of Rorty’s pragmatist philosophy of sociopolitical criticism and an insightful and illuminating critical comparison of it with other leading approaches in contemporary political theory. It also makes an important contribution to debates over agonistics and pluralism. -- James Tully, author of
Public Philosophy in a New KeyClearly written and impressive for its scholarship.... Highly recommended. * Choice *
A rich and insightful study into the relationship between Richard Rorty and various strands of contemporary political thought...a welcome contribution. -- David Rondel, University of Nevada * Political Theory *
Chin has provided an indispensable contribution to thinking about Rorty, pragmatism, and new paths for political theory. -- Matthew Festenstein University of York * Contemporary Political Theory Review *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Part I: Rorty and Political ThinkingIntroduction. Theory and Method: Reconstructing Rorty
1. The Authority of the Social: A Pragmatic Ethos of Inquiry
Part II: Rorty and Continental Political Thought: Ontology, Naturalism, and History2. Theorizing After Foundations: Ontology, Language, and Heidegger
3. Reconstructing Naturalism: Pragmatic or Ontological?
4. History and Modernity: Self-Assertion and Critical Reflexivity
Part III: Rorty and Contemporary Political Theory: Pragmatic Sociopolitical Criticism5. Pragmatic Political Thinking and Contemporary Critical Social Theory
6. How Pragmatism Constrains and Enables Political Thinking
Notes
References
Index