1st Edition

Ethics and Politics in Contemporary Theory Between Critical Theory and Post-Marxism

By Mark Devenney Copyright 2004
    206 Pages
    by Routledge

    208 Pages
    by Routledge

    In addressing the political and theoretical debates between critical and post-Marxist theorists, this book discusses the politics of communication and rationality, subjectivity, sovereignty, ethics and deliberative democracy, considering questions such as:

    * Does the theory of communicative action justify deliberative democracy?
    * Is a theory of hegemony compatible with an account which relies upon an ideal of communicative success?
    * Is autonomy a good which should be fostered?
    * Can the ideal of democracy extend beyond the nation state?
    * Does post-Marxism have anything interesting to say about ethics?

    Analysing the work of Ernesto Laclau and Jürgen Habermas - as representatives of different choices made in regard to theory, politics and morality - Ethics and Politics in Contemporary Theory develops a critical response to the contrasting conclusions of these approaches.

    1. The Ends of Marx(ism)?2. Language, Communication, Performativity3. Performativity and Politics: From Habermas to Laclau4. Politics, Idealisation and Performativity5. Quasi-Transcendentalism and Critical Theory6. The Politics of Subjectivity7. Deliberative or Radical Democracy? The Politics of Performativity8. Post-Structuralism and Democratic Theory9. Ethics and Politics in Discourse Theory

    Biography

    Mark Devenney is a senior lecturer in politics and philosophy at the University of Brighton, UK. His current research concerns political economy and death, and involves a re-reading of Marx's labour theory of value and Foucault's biopolitics.

    'It is extremely hard to do justice in a short review to the complex arguments developed in this book. They touch upon fundamental problems such as the nature of language, relations between language and reality, and rationality.' - Krzystof Jaskulowski in Political Studies Review