In Search of Just Families: A Philosophical View
By (Author) Chhanda Gupta
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
6th June 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Sociology: family and relationships
306.85
Hardback
168
Width 159mm, Height 230mm, Spine 19mm
431g
This book explores two contemporary combative views regarding the search for just families. These views arise from the conundrum of the family being seen as a supportive, nurturing haven versus a grievously unjust, harmful institution that violates the rights and freedoms of any individual family member. Triggered by anti-family movements, which have been inspired by the ideas of some theorists and writers, the book addresses the question: Is family destined to wither away It challenges the radical idea that the solution to the problem of unjust families is their complete replacement by purportedly just anti-familial alternatives. Chhanda Gupta advances a distinct reformist and reconciliatory view that the expulsion of either side of the family-anti-family binary is not the answer. She seeks to syncretize the seemingly irreconcilable ideas propagated through that philosophical binary. Furthermore, she urges that the search for just families must find its answer in clarifying how the term just applies to the characters, behaviors, and attitudes of people who comprise actual families. The search is not for a perfectly just society or polity, or even for a perfectly just family. Instead it is a search for ways to redress the remediable injustices that occur in families, in order to benefit and uplift individuals and families and the societies in which they live.
In Search of Just Familiesinvites the reader into a rich philosophical source with respect to this basic component of all societies: where different ethics meet, in their varied ways. The imagery of Haven and Home is a recurrent theme.All readers will find parts of this book that can inspire questions and explorations of their own: in their own disciplines, their own sites of research focus, and their own moment of research and experience in historical time. -- Jane I. Guyer, Professor Emerita of Anthropology, Johns Hopkins University
Chhanda Gupta is one of the leading analytic philosophers of India. In this work she focuses on the institution of the family, a subject of heated philosophical debate. Gupta deftly locates herself on a middle way that reconciles the binary divisions between the ethics of right and the ethics of care. Her seminal treatment provides an important template for future studies on this topic. -- Michael Krausz, Bryn Mawr College
In moving beyond the binary of pro-family and anti-family theorization, Chhanda Gupta probes a wider domain of philosophical discourse on human wrongs and institutional responsibilities in the quest for justice. The chapters explore several leading philosophical ideologies and competing ethical theories from a variety of perspectives, with admirable clarity, impressive depth, and sharply contested arguments. The book constitutes an innovative and important contribution to our understanding of the reach of justice within the family that has profound implications for our time, especially as we begin to grapple with the slogan: the personal is political. -- Deen Chatterjee, University of Utah
Chhanda Gupta is a retired professor of philosophy at Jadavpur University, Calcutta