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  1. Marx’s Temporal Bridges and Other Pathways.Massimiliano Tomba - 2015 - Historical Materialism 23 (4):75-91.
    In this article I reply to three critics. Responding to Cinzia Arruzza, I argue that capital encounters a large spectrum of differences of gender, religion and ethnicity, as well as differences generated by racism. Capital is able to use these differences to its own profit in order to differentiate wages and intensities of exploitation and thereby divide the working class. Responding to Peter Osborne, I contend that my temporal-layered framework elucidates how capital organises and synchronises different temporalities according to the (...)
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  • Postclassical Liberalism and Emergent Secularism: An Overview, Interpretation, and Criticism of Akeel Bilgrami's Theory.P. Losonczi - 2014 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2014 (167):69-87.
    Introduction In this essay, I will provide an overview of Akeel Bilgrami's model of negotiated-emergent secularism. Although in the conclusion of my essay I will put forward some critical comments, I believe that Bilgrami's thesis, as well as the underlying philosophical and moral-psychological theory, deserves attention as an interesting and important contribution to the intensifying debates on secularism.Bilgrami's goal in proposing the model of emergent-negotiated secularism is twofold. On the one hand, he intends to work out a position that would (...)
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  • Fear of principles? A cautious defense of the Precautionary Principle.Gloria Origgi - 2014 - Mind and Society 13 (2):215-225.
    Should fear guide our actions and governments’ political decisions? A leitmotiv of common sense is that emotions are tricky, they blur our rational capacity of estimating utilities in order to plan action and thus they should be banned from any account of our rational expectations. In this paper I argue that an “heuristic of fear” is the appropriate attitude to adopt in order to cope with extreme risks. I thus defend the Precautionary Principle against the criticism put forward by Cass (...)
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  • Beyond the Secular: Jacques Derrida and the Theological-Political Complex.Andrea Cassatella - 2023 - Albany: SUNY Press.
    Investigates, through a critical exploration of Derrida's political thought, the foundations of modern secular discourse in relation to issues of race and colonialism.
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  • Sheldon Wolin, Jean Vanier and the present age: reflections on replenishment, resistance and progress.Jeff Frank - 2018 - Ethics and Education 13 (3):360-369.
    ABSTRACTNeoliberalism is a force that seeks to commodify the time of education. Time must be productive. We rank journals and reward scholars who produce work published in those highly ranked journals. In the process of commodifying the work of scholarship, we lose time to the logics of neoliberalism. In search of this lost time, we need allies and resources that allow us to resist and reclaim that which replenishes value. This paper makes the case that a vision of progress connected (...)
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  • Collective Love as Public Freedom: Dancing Resistance. Ehrenreich, Arendt, Kristeva, and Idle No More.Allison Weir - 2017 - Hypatia 32 (1):19-34.
    In the Indigenous resistance movement that came to be known as “Idle No More,” round dances played a central role. From the beginning of the movement in western Canada in the winter of 2012–13, and as it spread across Turtle Island and throughout the world, round dances served to bring together Indigenous and non-Indigenous activists with people in the streets. “At almost every event, we collectively embodied our diverse and ancient traditions in the round dance by taking the movement to (...)
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  • Towards a transregional history of secularism: Intellectual connectivity, social reform, and state-building in South and Southeast Asia, 1918–1960.Clemens Six - 2022 - Theory and Society 51 (5):761-790.
    This article argues for a transregional historical approach to explain the career of political secularism, i.e. the ideas and practices that inform the modern state’s relationship to and administration of religion, in the 20th century. More specifically, it asks in how far we can understand secularism in South and Southeast Asia between the end of the First World War and decolonisation after 1945 as a result of transregional patterns that evolved within and beyond these regions. The argument is based on (...)
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