1st Edition

Kant, Critique and Politics

By Kimberly Hutchings Copyright 1996

    Why does the ghost of Kant continue to haunt contemporary critical theory? Kant, Critique and Politics examines the influence of Kantian critique on the work of such major and diverse theorists as Habermas, Arendt, Foucault and Lyotard. It offers an entirely new reading of Kant, challenging the orthodox distinctions between modernist and postmodernist theorizing, by illuminating how Kant's influence continues to structure critical debate.
    This is the first book to offer both a systematic reading of Kant and to contextualise his work in the light of the continental tradition. It will be central to political philosophers and students of international relations and feminist theory.

    INTRODUCTION; Chapter 1 PHILOSOPHY AS CRITIQUE; Chapter 2 KANT's CRITICAL POLITICS; Chapter 3 HABERMAS AND THE POSSIBILITY OF CRITICAL THEORY; Chapter 4 ARENDT AND THE POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY OF JUDGEMENT; Chapter 5 FOUCAULT's CRITICAL ATTITUDE; Chapter 6 LYOTARD: PHRASING THE POLITICAL; Chapter 7 THE CRITIQUE OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICS; Chapter 8 FEMINIST CRITICAL THEORY CONCLUSION NOTES Bibliography Index;

    Biography

    Kimberly Hutchings is Lecturer in Political Theory at the University of Edinburgh.