Available Formats
Egalitarian Moments: From Descartes to Rancire
By (Author) Dr Devin Zane Shaw
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
18th May 2017
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Western philosophy from c 1800
Phenomenology and Existentialism
Social and political philosophy
323.42
Paperback
224
318g
Jacques Rancires work has challenged many of the assumptions of contemporary continental philosophy by placing equality at the forefront of emancipatory political thought and aesthetics. Drawing on the claim that egalitarian politics persistently appropriates elements from political philosophy to engage new forms of dissensus, Devin Zane Shaw argues that Rancires work also provides an opportunity to reconsider modern philosophy and aesthetics in light of the question of equality. In Part I, Shaw examines Rancires philosophical debts to the good sense of Cartesian egalitarianism and the existentialist critique of identity. In Part II, he outlines Rancires critical analyses of Walter Benjamin and Clement Greenberg and offers a reinterpretation of Rancires debate with Alain Badiou in light of the philosophical differences between Schiller and Schelling. From engaging debates about political subjectivity from Descartes to Sartre, to delineating the egalitarian stakes in aesthetics and the philosophy of art from Schiller to Badiou, this book presents a concise tour through a series of egalitarian moments found within the histories of modern philosophy and aesthetics.
The book speaks to an urgent, incomplete task of contemporary philosophy: to be done with its decades-long tradition of scholastic, ritual self-flagellation and get on with the business of thinking the emancipatory transformation of the world. Shaws contribution to this task is impressive, erudite, and takes a path less traveled. -- Matthew R. McLennan, Assistant Professor, Faculty of Philosophy, Saint Paul University, Canada * Canadian Society for Continental Philosophy *
Egalitarian Moments is a work that deserves careful attention from those interested in putting Rancires thought to productive useto doing things with Rancireas well as those interested in egalitarian politics more generally. -- Matthew Lampert, New School for Social Research, USA * Comparative and Continental Philosophy *
Shaw's work provides an important contribution to Rancierian scholarship and continental philosophy alike; his discussion of less well known secondary material in the history of philosophy is brilliantly used to advance his position. * Marx and Philosophy Review of Books *
Devin Zane Shaw teaches philosophy at the University of Ottawa and Carleton University. He is author of Freedom and Nature in Schellings Philosophy of Art (Bloomsbury, 2010) and is co-editor of, and contributor to, Theory Mad Beyond Redemption: The Post-Kantian Poe, a special edition of the Edgar Allan Poe Review (2012).