The Marxian legacy: the search for the new left
In: Political philosophy and public purpose
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In: Political philosophy and public purpose
In: Political philosophy and public purpose
In: Political Philosophy and Public Purpose
In: Political Philosophy and Public Purpose Ser.
Foreword -- Preface -- Acknowledgements1 -- Contents -- chapter 1: Introduction -- 1 The Dialectic of Politics and Antipolitics -- 2 The Origins of this Book: The Actuality of the New Left -- 3 The Structure of Engagement -- Notes -- Part I: Engaging with the Left -- chapter 2: "These Petrified Relations Must Be Forced to Dance": An Interview with Dick Howard -- Notes -- Bibliography -- chapter 3: The New Left and the Search for the Political -- 1 Defining the Political -- 2 The Political and the Moral -- 3 The Necessity of the Political -- 4 Recovering Political Thought -- Notes
In this rethinking of Marxism and its blind spots, Dick Howard argues that the collapse of European communism in 1989 should not be identified with a victory for capitalism and makes possible a wholesale reevaluation of democratic politics in the U.S. and abroad. The author turns to the American and French Revolutions to uncover what was truly ?revolutionary" about those events, arguing that two distinct styles of democratic life emerged, the implications of which were misinterpreted in light of the rise of communism.Howard uses a critical rereading of Marx as a theorist of democracy to offer
In: Columbia studies in political thought
The conflict between politics and antipolitics has replayed throughout Western history and philosophical thought. From the beginning, Plato's quest for absolute certainty led him to denounce democracy, an anti-political position challenged by Aristotle. In his wide-ranging narrative, Dick Howard puts this dilemma into fresh perspective, proving our contemporary political problems are not as unique as we think. Howard begins with democracy in ancient Greece and the rise and fall of republican politics in Rome. In the wake of Rome's collapse, political thought searched for a new medium, and the conflict between politics and antipolitics reemerged through the contrasting theories of Saint Augustine and Saint Thomas. During the Renaissance and Reformation, the emergence of the modern individual again transformed the terrain of the political. Even so, politics vs. antipolitics dominated the period, frustrating even Machiavelli, who sought to reconceptualize the nature of political thought. Hobbes and Locke, theorists of the social contract, then reenacted the conflict, which Rousseau sought (in vain) to overcome. Adam Smith and the growth of modern economic liberalism, the radicalism of the French revolution, and the conservative reaction of Edmund Burke subsequently marked the triumph of antipolitics, while the American Revolution momentarily offered the potential for a renewal of politics. Taken together, these historical examples, viewed through the prism of philosophy, reveal the roots of today's political climate and the trajectory of battles yet to come
In: Passages
In: Innovations transfer