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Contributors
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Matthew Quest
C.L.R. James’ New Notion
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Evgeni V. Pavlov
The Current Crisis and the Cost of Capitalism
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Peter Stone
“An Aristotle’s Eye View”
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Cheyney Ryan
Under Discussion: The Chickenhawk Syndrome:
War, Sacrifice, and Personal Responsibility
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Matt Applegate
The Multivoiced Body
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Cheyney Ryan
Replies to Anatole, Michael, and Harry
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Harry van der Linden
From Combat Boots to Civilian Shoes:
Reflections on The Chickenhawk Syndrome
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Executive Editorial Committee and Editorial Board
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Call For Articles
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Peter Gratton
Editors’ Introduction
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Jordy Rocheleau
License to Kill:
Rethinking War’s Ethical Boundaries
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Lasse Thomassen
Derrida, Time, and Political Subjectivity
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Richard Ganis
Caring for Nature in Habermas, Vogel, and Derrida:
Reconciling the Speaking and Nonspeaking Worlds at the Cost of “Re-enchantment”?
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En rapport with Jürgen Habermas, this paper argues for an environmental ethics that formalistically links the “good-for-nature” to the communicatively conceived “good-for-humanity.” This orientation guards against the possibility of humanity’s “knowledge-constitutive interest” in the instrumentalization of the environment being pressed forth as a project of limitless domination and mastery. Such an ethics is nonetheless well supplemented with Axel Honneth’s idea of an “indirect” recognitional attitude toward the world of objects, which accommodates the impulse of “care” for nature without succumbing to the aporias of a naturalistic ethic. The essay contends that the categorical resources needed to avert the slide toward naturalism are dissolved in the antifoundationalist “critiques of nature” advanced by Steven Vogel and Jacques Derrida.
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Harry van der Linden
Editor’s Introduction
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76.
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Call for Papers
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77.
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Contributors
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78.
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Randall Williams
The Ballot and the Bullet:
Anti-Juridical Praxis from Malcolm X and Nelson Mandela to the Bolivarian Revolution
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This essay examines multiple iterations of anti-juridicalism in relation to shifting forms of postwar imperialism and decolonization. The anti-juridical designates a differential political praxis of rights and law grounded in conditions of subalternity and revolutionary struggle. It stands in opposition to the abstract, neutraluniversality advanced by dominant theories of liberallegalism and hegemonic conceptions of the rule of law. In contemporary modalities, anti-juridical praxis serves as a necessary, critical supplement to the articulation of constituent power in the postcolony with profound implications for constructing a state of law and justice, and for building of a new internationalism of peoples.
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Melissa A. Mosko
Toward a New Humanity
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Elizabeth Purcell
Fetishizing Ontology:
Julia Kristeva and Slavoj Žižek on the Structure of Desire
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Recently Slavoj Žižek has critiqued certain "feminist" readings of Lacan's feminine structure of desire, including Julia Kristeva, for postulating a feminine discourse which is supposedly beyond the phallic economy. This paper defends Kristeva's position, both by noting how Žižek Hegelian ontology prevents him from utilizing the resources of sexual difference and by clarifying Kristeva's double account of maternity. One consequence of this investigation is that a Kristevean theory of desire will provide one with a new form of political intervention by isolating sites of resistence that Žižek disavows. Another consequence is a refiguration of "feminist" psychoanalytic practice.
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