
Containing Community
From Political Economy to Ontology in Agamben, Esposito, and Nancy
- 260 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Winner of the 2017 Symposium Book Award presented by Symposium: Canadian Journal of Continental Philosophy Community has been both celebrated and demonized as a fortress that shelters and defends its members from being exposed to difference. Instead of abandoning community as an antiquated model of relationships that is ill suited for our globalized world, this book turns to the writings of Giorgio Agamben, Roberto Esposito, and Jean-Luc Nancy in search for ways to rethink community in an open and inclusive manner. Greg Bird argues that a central piece of this task is found in how each philosopher rearticulates community not as something that is proper to those who belong and improper to those who are excluded or where inclusion is based on one's share in common property. We must return to the forgotten dimension of sharing, not as a sharing of things that we can contain and own, but as a process that divides us up and shares us out in community with one another. This book traces this problem through a wide array of fields ranging from biopolitics, communitarianism, existentialism, phenomenology, political economy, radical philosophy, and social theory.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1. Political Economy and the Proper
- 2. Ontology and the Proper
- 3. The Existential Community
- 4. The Community Without Content
- 5. The Deontological Community
- Conclusion
- Abbreviations
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
- Back Cover