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  1. Citizens and Strangers: Cosmopolitanism as an Empty Universal.John Rundell - 2016 - Critical Horizons 17 (1):110-122.
    This paper approaches the issue of cosmopolitanism from the vantage point of hospitality. The notion of hospitality throws into relief some issues that are at the heart of political cosmopolitanism, but cannot be addressed by it. This is because these issues do not necessarily revolve around the category of the citizen, but around the categories of stranger and outsider. The paper critiques the tendency to conflate the categories of the stranger and the outsider and goes on to argue that the (...)
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  • James Bohman, Democracy Across Borders: From Dêmos to Dêmoi.John Rundell - 2009 - Critical Horizons 10 (1):141-147.
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  • Democratic Revolutions, Power and the City: Weber and Political Modernity.John Rundell - 2009 - Thesis Eleven 97 (1):81-98.
    This article develops three interconnected arguments concerning the image of modernity as a revolutionary epoch and the way in which this image has been understood and theorized. These three lines of conceptualization, which can only be sketched in less rather than greater detail here, concern the constellation or figuration of modernity, its democratic dimension, and in reference to each, the work of Max Weber, especially The City. More specifically, the article argues that modern democracy is revolutionary when viewed as an (...)
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  • Imagining cities, others.John Rundell - 2014 - Thesis Eleven 121 (1):9-22.
    This paper explores the constellation of fear and the social forces, assumptions and images that construct it. The paper’s underlying presupposition is that there are many locations for fear that run parallel to one another in modernity, one of which will be discussed here – the city. It begins by exploring two images and ideas of the city, around which the social theoretical tradition has revolved, both of which are linked in some way to the ideal of the metropolis and (...)
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  • Big city blues.Trevor Hogan & Julian Potter - 2014 - Thesis Eleven 121 (1):3-8.
    The advent of the ‘mega’ or world city seems inseparable from the ambivalent and transient experience of modernity – the ideals of liberty, individuality, property, accelerating progress, and, for many, the realities of immobility, anonymity, poverty, and arresting regression. When more than half of the global population pursues an existence within an urban frame, the densities and boundaries of urban spaces swell to fantastical proportions. With the vast increase in size, so the experiences and expectations of the city become more (...)
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  • Reconnecting the Antipodes: A Reflective Note.David Pearson - 2005 - Thesis Eleven 82 (1):88-96.
    This article, drawing on Peter Beilharz’s account of Bernard Smith’s conception of the Antipodes, argues for the utility of using the connections between Australia and New Zealand as a means of exploring aspects of settler state and national relations within a local, meso-regional and global perspective. The historical development of British imperial and settler state citizenship provides the setting for demonstrating how an Antipodean viewpoint could be pursued. Emphasis is placed on the creation and reproduction of aboriginal and immigrant minorities, (...)
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