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(Un)contemporary Variations
Timothy S. Murphy
Murphy, Timothy S. Hardt, Michael
ISBN: 9780719066467
Format: Hardback
Publisher:Manchester University Press
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In Subversive Spinoza, Antonio Negri spells out the philosophical credo that inspired his radical renewal of Marxism and his compelling analysis of the modern state and the global economy by means of an inspiring reading of the challenging metaphysics of the seventeenth- century Dutch-Jewish philosopher Spinoza.
In Subversive Spinoza, Antonio Negri spells out the philosophical credo that inspired his radical renewal of Marxism and his compelling analysis of the modern state and the global economy by means of an inspiring reading of the challenging metaphysics of the seventeenth-century Dutch-Jewish philosopher Spinoza. For Negri, Spinoza's philosophy has never been more relevant than it is today to debates over individuality and community, democracy and resistance, and modernity and postmodernity. This collection of essays extends, clarifies and revises the argument of Negri's influential 1981 book The Savage Anomaly: The Power of Spinoza's Metaphysics and Politics and links it directly to his recent work on constituent power, time and empire.
| ISBN | 0719066468 | | Pages | 160 | | ISBN13 | 9780719066467 (What's this?) | | Volumes | 1 | | Publisher | Manchester University Press | | Weight (grammes) | 286 | | Imprint | Manchester University Press | | Published in | Manchester | | Format | Hardback | | Series title | Angelaki Humanities S. | | Publication date | 26 Aug 2004 | | Height (mm) | 216 | | Non-book description | xvi, 124 p ; | | Width (mm) | 138 | | Library of Congress | 2005271309 | | Spine width (mm) | 16 | | DEWEY | 199.492 | | Academic level | Tertiary education, General, Professional / Scholarly | | DEWEY edition | DC22 | |
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| I | | Spinoza : five reasons for his contemporaneity | | 1 | | II | | The Political treatise, or, the foundation of modern democracy | | 9 | | III | | Reliqua desiderantur : a conjecture for a definition of the concept of democracy in final Spinoza | | 28 | | IV | | Between infinity and community : notes on materialism in Spinoza and Leopardi | | 59 | | V | | Spinoza's anti-modernity | | 79 | | VI | | The 'return to Spinoza' and the return of communism | | 94 | | VII | | Democracy and eternity in Spinoza | | 101 | | | | Postface : to conclude : Spinoza and the postmoderns | | 113 |
"Negri renews our understanding of Spinozism in many regards...he is authentically and profoundly Spinozist."--Gilles Deleuze "The savage power [of Negri's interpretation] upsets the ordinary frameworks through which we understand a philosophy, and not just Spinoza's--it forces us to re-read from a reverse angle, and in place of that doctrine we thought we knew so well, fixed in the immutable catalog of systems, it leads us to discover a living thought that in fact belongs to history, to our history."--Pierre Macherey  Be the first to write a customer review
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