The New Enlightenment: Critical Reflections on the Political Significance of Race
In: The Blackwell Guide to Social and Political Philosophy, S. 271-291
3 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: The Blackwell Guide to Social and Political Philosophy, S. 271-291
In: SUNY Series, Philosophy and Race
Intro -- Critical Affinities -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Note on Abbreviations -- Introduction:The Art of the Cultural Physician -- Part I: Diagnoses -- 1. Kindred Spirits: Nietzsche and Lockeas Progenitors of Axiological Liberation -- 2. Nietzsche, Ressentiment, Lynching -- 3. Double Consciousness and Second Sight -- 4. Of Tragedy and the Blues in an Age of Decadence: Thoughts on Nietzsche and African America -- Part II: Prescriptions -- 5. Ecce Negro: How to Become a Race Theorist -- 6. Nietzsche's Proto-Phenomenological Approach to theTheoretical Problem of Race -- 7. The Price of the Ticket: A Genealogy and Revaluation of Race -- Part III: Regimens of Recovery -- 8. Unlikely Illuminations: Nietzsche and Frederick Douglasson Power, Struggle, and the Aisthesis of Freedom -- 9. Masculinity and Existential Freedom: Wright, Ellison, Morrison,and Nietzsche -- 10. Why Nietzsche (Sometimes) Can't Sing the Blues, or Davis, Nietzsche,and the Social Embeddedness of Aesthetic Judgments -- Contributors -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Z.
Alain Locke, the central promoter of the Harlem Renaissance, is placed in conversation with leading philosophers and cultural figures in the modern world, from Aristotle to Obama. For teachers and students of contemporary debates in pragmatism, diversity, and value theory, these conversations' define new-and controversial-terrain