In The Book of Others, Benjamin Arditi examines the enduring theoretical influence of four major political thinkers—Carl Schmitt, Louis Althusser, Ernesto Laclau, and Jacques Rancière—whom he frames as “others” central to shaping contemporary understandings of politics. Arditi situates these figures within the terrain of post-foundational thought, emphasizing their skepticism about transcendental grounds in political theory. Through chapters focused on themes like modernity, constituent power, decisionism, ideology, hegemony, post-hegemony, populism, and dissensus, the book explores how each thinker redefines the political as a space of contestation rather than a settled domain.
This is no exegetical exercise. Arditi challenges canonical interpretations by exposing the internal tensions and ambivalences in each thinker’s work. He treats their published texts as provisional interventions rather than their last word on a particular subject, approaching them as intellectual sparring partners in a form of conceptual shadow boxing. Through this dynamic and polemical approach, Arditi pushes their ideas into directions they either did not anticipate or deliberately avoided. The result is a nuanced understanding of post-foundational political thought and makes a compelling case for thinking both with and against influential theorists.
The Book of Others significantly enriches critical political analysis, offering a substantive contribution to post-Marxist, democratic, and critical theory.
This book examines the enduring influence of four major political thinkers; Carl Schmitt, Louis Althusser, Ernesto Laclau, and Jacque Rancière; and through themes like modernity, constituent power, decisionism, ideology, hegemony, populism, and dissensus, explores how each thinker redefines the political as a space of contestation.
Introduction: Who Are the Others? Chapter 1. Modernity, Democracy, and Mundane Constituent Capacity. Chapter 2. Schmitt Contra Schmitt: Taking on the Political. Chapter 3. Althusser: The Gleam of Theory. Chapter 4. Laclau’s Post-Marxism: Politics Means Hegemony. Chapter 5. The Landscape of Post-Hegemony: Elections, Infrapolitics, Multitude, and Viral Politics. Chapter 6. Populism Is Hegemony Is Politics: Ernesto Laclau’s Theory of Populism. Chapter 7. Fidelity to Disagreement: Jacques Rancière and Politics.
Produktdetaljer
Biografisk notat
Benjamin Arditi is Professor of Political Theory at the National University of Mexico, UNAM. He is the author of Politics on the Edges of Liberalism: Difference, Populism, Revolution, Emancipation (Edinburgh, 2007) and Is There Such a Thing as Populism? (Routledge, 2025).