Equaliberty
Political Essays
a John Hope Franklin Center Book
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Author/Editor Bios
Back to TopÉtienne Balibar was a student of Louis Althusser, with whom he cowrote Reading Capital. The author of many books on moral and political philosophy, he is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the Université de Paris–X Nanterrre and Anniversary Chair in the Humanities at Kingston University in London. He has served as Distinguished Professor of Humanities at the University of California, Irvine, and, more recently, as Visiting Professor at Columbia University.
Table Of Contents
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Foreword vii
Introduction. The Antimony of Citizenship 1
Part One. The Statement and Institution of Rights 33
1. The Proposition of Equaliberty 35
2. The Reversal of Possessive Individualism 67
3. New Reflections on Equaliberty: Two Lessons 99
Part Two. Sovereignty, Emancipation, Community (Some Critiques) 133
4. What Is Political Philosophy? Notes For a Topography 135
5. Communism and Citizenship: On Nicos Poulantzas 145
6. Hannah Arendt, the Right to Have Rights, and Civil Disobedience 165
7. Populism and Politics: The Return of the Contract 187
Part Three. For a Democracy Without Exclusion 197
8. What Are the Excluded Excluded From? 199
9. Dissonances within Laïcité: The New "Headscarf Affair" 209
10. Secularism and Universality: The Liberal Paradox 223
11. Uprisings in the Banlieues 231
12. Toward Co-Citizenship 259
Conclusion. Resistance, Insurrection, Insubordination 277
Notes 295
Works Cited 343
Index
Introduction. The Antimony of Citizenship 1
Part One. The Statement and Institution of Rights 33
1. The Proposition of Equaliberty 35
2. The Reversal of Possessive Individualism 67
3. New Reflections on Equaliberty: Two Lessons 99
Part Two. Sovereignty, Emancipation, Community (Some Critiques) 133
4. What Is Political Philosophy? Notes For a Topography 135
5. Communism and Citizenship: On Nicos Poulantzas 145
6. Hannah Arendt, the Right to Have Rights, and Civil Disobedience 165
7. Populism and Politics: The Return of the Contract 187
Part Three. For a Democracy Without Exclusion 197
8. What Are the Excluded Excluded From? 199
9. Dissonances within Laïcité: The New "Headscarf Affair" 209
10. Secularism and Universality: The Liberal Paradox 223
11. Uprisings in the Banlieues 231
12. Toward Co-Citizenship 259
Conclusion. Resistance, Insurrection, Insubordination 277
Notes 295
Works Cited 343
Index
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Rights and licensingAdditional Information
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Paper ISBN:
978-0-8223-5564-9 /
Hardcover ISBN:
978-0-8223-5550-2 /
eISBN:
978-0-8223-7722-1 /
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1215/9780822377221
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