|
1.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Harry van der Linden
Editor’s Introduction
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
|
2.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Executive Editorial Committee
A Thank-You Note to RPR’s Referees
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
articles |
3.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Jason Del Gandio
Rethinking Immaterial Labor:
Communication, Reality, and Neo-Radicalism
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
Working from the post-Workerist tradition, this essay re-specifies the phenomenon of immaterial labor. Immaterial labor is not simply a mode of work relevant to the information-based global economy. Instead, immaterial labor is inherent to the human condition: human beings materialize realities through the immaterial means of communication. This ontological approach to immaterial labor enables us to rethink the radical project: rather than trying to “change the world,” we are now called to create alternative realities that resist the subjugation of our immaterial laboring. Since we are all immaterial laborers, we all have a stake in revolutionizing our realities. This essay provides a preliminary sketch of this political philosophy.
|
|
|
discussion: african american philosophy in crisis? |
4.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Tommy J. Curry
On Derelict and Method:
The Methodological Crisis of African-American Philosophy’s Study of African-Descended Peoples under an Integrationist Milieu
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
African-American/Africana philosophy has made a name for itself as a critical perspective on the inadequacies of European philosophical thought. While this polemical mode has certainly contributed to the questioning of and debates over the universalism of white philosophy, it has nonetheless left Africana philosophy dependent on these criticisms to justify its existence as “philosophical.” This practice has the effect of not only distracting Black philosophers from understanding the thought of their ancestors, but formulates the practice of Africana philosophy as “racial therapy” for whites. By making the goal of Africana philosophy the transformation of the white racist to the white non-racist, Africana philosophy takes up a decidedly political (integrationist) agenda. Making this agenda the guiding ethos of Africana philosophical praxis censors both the Africana thinkers available to study and the interpretation of the figures deemed “fit” for study. Thus I conclude a culturalogic approach is the best way to delineate between the political and methodological in Africana philosophy.
|
|
|
5.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Robert E. Birt
Derelict Africana Philosophy?
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
6.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Tommy J. Curry
It’s Still Black in the Details:
Reflections on Robert Birt’s Interrogation of “On Derelict and Method”
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
7.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Lucius T. Outlaw, Jr.
On Tommy Curry’s “On Derelict and Method”
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
8.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Tommy J. Curry
It’s a Criticism . . . because “I” Said So?:
A Reply to Lucius Outlaw’s Defense of Status Quo Disciplinarity
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
essays on “undocumented people” |
9.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Eduardo Mendieta
The Right to Political Membership:
Democratic Morality and the Rights of Irregular Immigrants
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
10.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
José Jorge Mendoza
Neither a State of Nature nor a State of Exception:
Law, Sovereignty, and Immigration
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
11.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Carlos Alberto Sánchez
On Documents and Subjectivity:
The Formation and De-Formation of the Immigrant Identity
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
12.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Jose-Antonio Orosco
Aliens and Neighbors:
Jane Addams and the Reframing of “Illegal” Immigration
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
book reviews |
13.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Peter Amato
Decentering and Refocusing Marx
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
14.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Matt Applegate
Car, Hacker, Exit:
Three Movements of Ecologica
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
15.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Ann Ferguson
The Global Reach of Our Political Responsibilities:
A Review of Iris Young’s New Book
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
16.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Brent A. R. Hege
Political Theology in a Postsecularist Key
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
17.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
E. Das Janssen
Bodies, Sexes, Genders
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
18.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Sebastian Purcell
A New Communism:
Badiou’s Non-Party Proposal for the Communist Hypothesis
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
19.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Harry van der Linden
Rich Man’s War, Poor Man’s Fight
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|
|
20.
|
Radical Philosophy Review:
Volume >
14 >
Issue: 2
Contributors
view |
rights & permissions
| cited by
|
|
|