How to Read Hegel Now
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How to Read Hegel Now
A powerful exploration of how Hegel’s ideas about freedom can speak to social injustice today.
One might be forgiven for feeling that the philosophical tradition, notoriously replete with seemingly aloof and problematic men like Hegel, has little to offer contemporary conversations about justice. Yet for Shannon Hoff, Hegel’s ideas about freedom in particular contain vital resources for efforts to redress racism, sexism, colonialism, ableism, and capitalism today.
In How to Read Hegel Now, Hoff rereads the German philosopher alongside our most compelling thinkers about how oppression disavows our common humanity, including Frantz Fanon, Jessica Benjamin, Saba Mahmood, la paperson, Jean-Paul Sartre, Georges Canguilhem, and Rosemarie Garland-Thomson. Along the way, Hoff recovers in Hegel a new vision for human freedom that challenges the heritage of modern liberalism he helped to construct.
One might be forgiven for feeling that the philosophical tradition, notoriously replete with seemingly aloof and problematic men like Hegel, has little to offer contemporary conversations about justice. Yet for Shannon Hoff, Hegel’s ideas about freedom in particular contain vital resources for efforts to redress racism, sexism, colonialism, ableism, and capitalism today.
In How to Read Hegel Now, Hoff rereads the German philosopher alongside our most compelling thinkers about how oppression disavows our common humanity, including Frantz Fanon, Jessica Benjamin, Saba Mahmood, la paperson, Jean-Paul Sartre, Georges Canguilhem, and Rosemarie Garland-Thomson. Along the way, Hoff recovers in Hegel a new vision for human freedom that challenges the heritage of modern liberalism he helped to construct.
256 pages | 6 x 9
History: History of Ideas
Philosophy: Ethics, General Philosophy, Philosophy of Society
Political Science: Political and Social Theory
Table of Contents
Introduction
Reading a Tradition
The Ideas and the Interlocutors
Chapter One: How “We” Live Now
Revolutionary Existence
Hegel’s Alternative
Chapter Two: Recognition
The Struggle to the Death
Mastery and Servitude
Fanon and Racist Perception
Benjamin on the Mother-Other
Coda: Hegel on Gender
Chapter Three: Ethical Life
Greek Ethical Life
Ethical Life and Philosophy
Coulthard, la paperson, and Settler Colonialism
Mahmood, Abu-Lughod, and Colonial Feminism
Chapter Four: Conscience
The Determinacies and Relations of Conscience
Fanon, Merleau-Ponty, and Liberalism
Absolute Spirit
Chapter Five: Objective Spirit
The Dimensions of Materiality
Canguilhem, Garland-Thomson, and Ableism
Hegel on Civil Society, State, Constitution, and Government
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index
Reading a Tradition
The Ideas and the Interlocutors
Chapter One: How “We” Live Now
Revolutionary Existence
Hegel’s Alternative
Chapter Two: Recognition
The Struggle to the Death
Mastery and Servitude
Fanon and Racist Perception
Benjamin on the Mother-Other
Coda: Hegel on Gender
Chapter Three: Ethical Life
Greek Ethical Life
Ethical Life and Philosophy
Coulthard, la paperson, and Settler Colonialism
Mahmood, Abu-Lughod, and Colonial Feminism
Chapter Four: Conscience
The Determinacies and Relations of Conscience
Fanon, Merleau-Ponty, and Liberalism
Absolute Spirit
Chapter Five: Objective Spirit
The Dimensions of Materiality
Canguilhem, Garland-Thomson, and Ableism
Hegel on Civil Society, State, Constitution, and Government
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index
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