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Description
Small Wonder presents the dangers of the "underside of modernity": the unleashing of unlimited lust for (global) power and wealth. Relying on leading critical intellectuals, Dallmayr offers a critique of the self-deceptions of our age, arguing in favor of the cultivation of the "small wonder" of everyday life.
Table of Contents
Chapter 2 Small Wonder: Finitude and Its Horizons
Chapter 3 The Underside of Modernity: Adorno, Heidegger, and Dussel
Chapter 4 Empire or Cosmopolis: Civilization at the Crossroads
Chapter 5 Confronting Empire: A Tribute to Arundhati Roy
Chapter 6 Speaking Truth to Power: In Memory of Edward Said
Chapter 7 Critical Intellectuals in a Global Age: Toward a Global Public Sphere
Chapter 8 Social Identity and Creative Praxis: Hommage á Merleau-Ponty
Chapter 9 Nature and Artifact: Gadamer on Human Health
Chapter 10 Borders or Horizons: An Older Debate Revisited
Chapter 11 Empire and Faith: Sacred Non-Sovereignty
Chapter 12 Appendix
Chapter 13 The Dignity of Difference: A Salute to Jonathan Sacks
Chapter 14 Religion and Rationality: Continuity and Discontinuity in the Frankfurt School
Chapter 15 Nomolatry and Fidelity: A Response to Charles Taylor
Chapter 16 Index
Product details
Published | 08 Sep 2005 |
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Format | Paperback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 256 |
ISBN | 9780742549685 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Dimensions | 228 x 147 mm |
Series | New Critical Theory |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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<|>Small Wonder<|> is an extraordinary book in both its philosophical richness and its poetic evocation of a vision of hope that does not falter before the direness of our time. Dallmayr brings his vast erudition of the philosophical tradition to bear onsome of the most burning issues that any critical theory has to face in today?s world. It is a beautiful and somber book that reminds us of our responsibility to take notice of those ways in which a new world is being brought into being in the crevices and cracks of our everyday activities...
Drucilla Cornell, Professor of Political Science, Comparative Literature, and Women and Gender Studies, Rutgers University
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There is no single conclusion to be drawn from Small Wonder, but rather little pockets of hope within the text. With the multitude of topics approached, Dallmayr avoids prescribing a totalizing thought to rescue us from empire in its many forms, but provides a book which will speak differently to each reader. The disparate topics allow the reader to focus on particular aspects, but also remind them to adopt a holistic image of thought. Finally, the biggest contribution of Small Wonder is Dallmayr's employment of a more 'practical philosophy' approach to global politics, which successfully interconnects the theoretical and the empirical.
Mark Edward, Millennium: Journal of International Studies
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Small Wonder draws on a brilliant palate of thinkers-in Western and non-Western political theory, Frankfurt School critical theory, twentieth century Continental philosophy, post-colonial theory and literature-to argue artfully against empire and for peaceful global governance. Dallmyer's orientation is at once perspectival and global, deeply learned and politically urgent, fierce, humble, and generous. This is an erudite and compelling work of political theory, but it is also a beacon of hope and a tribute to thinking in a wretched historical time.
Wendy Brown, Class of 1936 First Professor of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley
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Small Wonder is an extraordinary book in both its philosophical richness and its poetic evocation of a vision of hope that does not falter before the direness of our time. Dallmayr brings his vast erudition of the philosophical tradition to bear on some of the most burning issues that any critical theory has to face in today's world. It is a beautiful and somber book that reminds us of our responsibility to take notice of those ways in which a new world is being brought into being in the crevices and cracks of our everyday activities.
Drucilla Cornell, Professor of Political Science, Comparative Literature, and Women and Gender Studies, Rutgers University