<p>“With Menke's brilliant book, the entire problem of bourgeois rights appears in a new light. Menke concentrates on their form to reveal the depoliticized and depowering social ontology that this form encodes. More extraordinary still, Menke identifies an alternate form that would escape this predicament and resecure rights as emancipatory.”<br /><b>Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley</b></p> <p>“An original and fresh critical analysis of the origins, distinctive character, and paradoxes of the modern theories of right and law. Menke combines historical nuance with systematic rigor in his critique of rights – especially as it pertains to political equality. A must read for anyone interested in probing the meaning and limitations of modern conceptions of right, law, and political community.”<br /><b>Richard J. Bernstein, Vera List Professor of Philosophy, New School for Social Research</b></p>

Modern political revolutions since the 18th century have swept away traditional systems of domination by declaring that ‘all men are created equal’. This declaration of equal rights is a fundamental political act – it is the political act in which the political community creates itself in relation to traditional systems of domination. But because it was generally assumed that the subject of these rights is the individual human being, the political community was subordinated to the individual. Marx discerned, rightly, that this was the paradox at the heart of the declaration of the rights of man.   But while Marx was right to highlight this paradox, his proposed solution does not provide us with a sound basis for overcoming it.   

In this major new work, Christoph Menke adopts a different approach: he argues that we can address and overcome this paradox only by embarking on a fundamental inquiry into the nature of rights.  Rights are a specific configuration of normativity: to have a right is to have a justified and binding claim.  But with the equal rights declared by modern revolutions, rights assumed a particular form: the normative claim to equality was combined with an assumption about the factual conditions of social life.  In this conception, society is the realm of private individuals pursuing their interests, and private interests are therefore seen as the natural basis for politics – what Menke calls ‘the naturalization of the social’. By laying bare this conception which lies at the basis of political literalism and modern law, Menke is able to criticize and move beyond it, opening up a new way of understanding rights that no longer involves the disempowering of the political community.  

This radical critique of rights and of modern law is a major contribution to critical theory and legal theory and it will be of great interest to students and scholars in social and political theory, philosophy and law.
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Marx’s Puzzle 1

Part I History: The Legalization of the Natural

1 A Philosophical History of Right’s Form 9

2 Interest in Self-Preservation 27

3 Inner Choice 43

4 Antagonism of Performance 61

Part II Ontology: The Materialism of Form

5 Legality’s Gap 71

6 Materialization 95

7 The Critique of Rights 116

Part III Critique: The Authorization of One’s Own

8 Authorization 125

9 Self-Will 140

10 The Privatization of the Public: Two Examples 161

11 Conclusion: The Bourgeois Subject – Loss of Negativity 178

12 Subjective Rights and Social Domination: An Outline 191

Part IV Revolution: The Dialectic of Judgment

13 The Aporia of the Bourgeois Constitution 227

14 Slave Revolt: Critique and Affirmation 243

15 A New Right 267

Law and Violence 292

Notes 295

Index 360

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781509520381
Publisert
2020-01-31
Utgiver
Vendor
Polity Press
Vekt
703 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
150 mm
Dybde
31 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
350

Forfatter
Oversetter

Biografisk notat

Christoph Menke is Professor of Philosophy at the Goethe University, Frankfurt.