87 research outputs found
Democracy, Critique and the Ontological Turn
This Critical Exchange is the result of two workshops held at the University of Edinburgh and the University of St. Andrews in November 2016. We thank the commentators at these events â Nathan Coombs, Patrick Hayden, Tony Lang and Nick Rengger â for their helpful feedback on the presentations. For institutional support, we owe gratitude to our home universities and Edinburgh University Press. Finally, we are grateful to Andrew Schaap for inviting us to edit the papers as a Critical Exchange for Contemporary Political Theory.Peer reviewe
Sensory geographies and defamiliarisation: migrant women encounter Brighton Beach
This articleâs starting point is a sensory, reflexive walk taken on Brighton seafront and beach, by fourteen migrant women and some of their children. It goes on to open up a wider discussion about the cultural politics and affective resonances, for refugees and migrants, of beaches. By discussing their sensory experiences of the beach, we begin to understand their âostranenieâ, or defamiliarisation, of making the familiar strange. We also see how evocative such sense-making can be, as the women compare their past lives to this, perceiving their lifeworld through a filter of migrancy.
The article goes onto discuss the broader cultural symbolism of beaches, which are a site of contestation over national values, boundaries, and belonging. As well as discussing sensory methodology in this article, and explaining the locale of Brighton Beach itself, it concludes with some wider thinking of the cultural politics of beach spaces and migrant perceptions
Women bargaining with patriarchy in coastal Kenya:contradictions, creative agency and food provisioning
Gender analysts have long recognised that challenging existing patriarchal structures involves risks for women, who may lose both long-term support and protection from kin. However, understanding the specific ways in which they âbargain with patriarchyâ in particular contexts is relatively poorly understood. We focus on a Mijikenda fishing community in coastal Kenya to explore contradictions in gendered power relations and how women deploy these to reinterpret gendered practices without directly challenging local patriarchal structures. We argue that a more complex understanding of womenâs creative agency can reveal both the value to women of culturally-specific gendered roles and responsibilities and the importance of subtle changes that they are able to negotiate in these. With reference to food provisioning, the analysis contributes to more nuanced understandings of gendered household food security and womenâs creative approaches to maintaining long-term security in their lives
âIâm not your motherâ: British social realism, neoliberalism and the maternal subject in Sally Wainwrightâs Happy Valley (BBC1 2014-2016)
This article examines Sally Wainwright's Happy Valley (BBC1, 2014â2016) in the context of recent feminist attempts to theorise the idea of a maternal subject. Happy Valley, a police series set in an economically disadvantaged community in West Yorkshire, has been seen as expanding the genre of British social realism, in its focus on strong Northern women, by giving it âa female voiceâ (Gorton, 2016: 73). I argue that its challenge is more substantial. Both the tradition of British social realism on which the series draws, and the neoliberal narratives of the family which formed the discursive context of its production, I argue, are founded on a social imaginary in which the mother is seen as responsible for the production of the selves of others, but cannot herself be a subject. The series itself, however, places at its centre an active, articulate, mobile and angry maternal subject. In so doing, it radically contests both a tradition of British social realism rooted in male nostalgia and more recent neoliberal narratives of maternal guilt and lifestyle choice. It does this through a more fundamental contestation: of the wider cultural narratives about selfhood and the maternal that underpin both. Its reflective maternal subject, whose narrative journey involves acceptance of an irrecoverable loss, anger and guilt as a crucial aspect of subjectivity, and who embodies an ethics of relationality, is a figure impossible in conventional accounts of subject and nation. She can be understood, however, in terms of recent feminist theories of the maternal
Honneth, Butler and the Ambivalent Effects of Recognition
This paper examines the ambivalent effects of recognition by critically examining Axel Honnethâs theory of recognition. I argue that his underlying perfectionist account and his focus on the psychic effects of recognition cause him to misrepresent or overlook significant connections between recognition and power. These claims are substantiated by (1) drawing from Butlerâs theory of gender performativity, power and recognition; and (2) exploring issues arising from the socio-institutional recognition of trans identities. I conclude by suggesting that certain problems with Butlerâs own position can corrected by drawing more from the Foucauldian aspects of her work. I claim that this is the most promising way to conceptualise recognition and its complex, ambivalent effects
Madness and the law: The Derrida/Foucault debate revisited
In this article the Derrida/Foucault debate is scrutinised with two closely related aims in mind: (1) reconsidering the way in which Foucaultâs texts, and especially the more recently published lectures, should be read; and (2) establishing the relation between law and madness. The article firstly calls for a reading of Foucault which exceeds metaphysics with the security it offers, by taking account of Derridaâs reading of Foucault as well as of the heterogeneity of Foucaultâs texts. The article reflects in detail on a text of Derrida on Foucault (âCogito and the History of Madnessâ) as well as a text of Foucault on Blanchot (âMaurice Blanchot: The Thought from Outsideâ). The latter text shows that Foucault was at times acutely aware of the difficulty involved in exceeding metaphysics and that he realised the importance in this regard of a reflection on literature. These reflections tie in closely with Foucaultâs History of Madness as well as with Derridaâs reflections on literature and on madness. Both Derrida and Foucault contend that law has much to learn from literature in understanding the relation between itself and madness. Literature more specifically points to lawâs âoriginâ in madness. The article contends that a failure to take seriously this origin, also in the reading of Foucaultâs lectures, would amount to a denial by law of itself
The politics of exemplarity: Ferrara on the disclosure of new political worlds
This paper focuses on the idea of exemplarity outlined by the Italian critical theorist Alessandro
Ferrara that forms part of his general case for the centrality of disclosure to emancipatory
political reasoning. Ferrara argues that âat its bestâ political thought should have the capacity to
animate the democratic imagination by disclosing new political worlds and hence new possibilities
for thought and action. I argue that Ferraraâs notion of exemplarity provides important
conceptual resources for a re-grounding of critical theory in the type of experientially based
disclosing critique that has, post Habermas, been marginalized. Ferraraâs work is significant in
two respects. First, exemplary universalism provides a much-needed alternative to the assimilative
paradigms of normative reasoning that dominate contemporary political theory.
Exemplary normativity suggests a mode of reasoning from concrete particularity that is more
inclusive than principle-based approaches of voices which, by virtue of their marginal or disempowered
status, are often absent from democratic deliberation. Second, Ferrara shows us
how, contra Habermas, far from being an unstable process of meaning creation, exemplary
disclosure has a systematic internal rationale that renders it open to inter-subjective validation. I
contend, however, that the critical promise of the idea of exemplarity is unfulfilled because of its
grounding in the speculative construct of sensus communis defined as a set of trans-cultural
intuitions about human flourishing. This socially deracinated abstraction blocks an adequate
understanding of the asymmetrical relations of power around which social difference is always
constructed. Ultimately, Ferrara is unable to demonstrate how exemplarity does in fact disclose
new political worlds and new possibilities for thought so much as confirm established liberal
norms. Drawing on critical race theory, I propose a re-politicized understanding of exemplarity
that locates its disclosing force in the actual dynamics of struggles against oppression rather than
in a socially weightless abstraction
Recommended from our members
Power, body, gender : implications of French social theory for feminist critique
This thesis was digitised by the British Library from microfilm. You can acquire a single copy of this thesis for research purposes by clicking on the padlock icon on the thesis file. Please be aware that the text in the supplied thesis pdf file may not be as clear as text in a thesis that was born digital or digitised directly from paper due to the conversion in format. However, all of the theses in Apollo that were digitised from microfilm are readable and have been processed by optical character recognition (OCR) technology which means the reader can search and find text within the document. If you are the author of this thesis and would like to make your work openly available, please contact us: [email protected]
Recommended from our members
The politics of welfare
Peer reviewed: True Steven Kleinâs excellent new book The Work of Politics is an innovative, insightful and original argument about the valuable role that welfare institutions may play in democratic movements for change. In place of a one-sided Weberian view of welfare institutions as bureaucratic instruments of social control, Klein recasts them in Arendtian terms as âworldly mediatorsâ or participatory mechanisms that act as channels for a radical politics of democratic world making. Although Klein is careful to modulate this utopian vision through a developed account of power and domination, I question the relevance of this largely historical model of world-building activism for the contemporary world of welfare. I point to the way that decades of neoliberal social policy have arguably eroded many of the social conditions and relations of solidarity that are vital prerequisites for collective activism around welfare. </jats:p
- âŠ