Results for 'Bindings, Codex, collecting, French Revolution'

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  1. The French Revolution and the temporality of the collective subject between Sieyes and Marx.Luca Basso - 2017 - In Vittorio Morfino & Peter D. Thomas (eds.), The government of time: theories of plural temporality in the Marxist tradition. Boston: Brill.
     
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  2.  31
    Inventing the French Revolution: Essays on French Political Culture in the Eighteenth Century.Keith Michael Baker - 1990 - Cambridge University Press.
    How did the French Revolution become thinkable? Keith Michael Baker, a leading authority on the ideological origins of the French Revolution, explores this question in his wide-ranging collection of essays. Analyzing the new politics of contestation that transformed the traditional political culture of the Old Regime during its last decades, Baker revises our historical map of the political space in which the French Revolution took form. Some essays study the ways in which the revolutionaries' (...)
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  3.  13
    Modular Collective Action and the Rise of the Social Movement: Why the French Revolution was Not Enough.Sidney Tarrow - 1993 - Politics and Society 21 (1):69-90.
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  4.  40
    A Modern Maistre: The Social and Political Thought of Joseph de Maistre (review).Abraham Anderson - 2000 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 38 (2):287-288.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:A Modern Maistre. The Social and Political Thought of Joseph de MaistreAbraham AndersonOwen Bradley. A Modern Maistre. The Social and Political Thought of Joseph de Maistre. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1999. Pp. 320. $55.00.In A Modern Maistre, Owen Bradley has sought to defend both the theoretical penetration and the practical wisdom of Joseph de Maistre, most famous of all "reactionaries" or royalist opponents of the French (...)
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  5. Fraternity.Deepa Kansra - 2013 - In Ajay Kumar Sharma (ed.), Edited Book. Twentieth First Century Publishers. pp. 184-195.
    From the scholarship available we can gather that fraternity has been subjected to several interpretations and linked with several virtues. For a few, it stands close to the actualities of solidarity, humanity, compassion, companionship, and brotherhood. For others, it is the “glue that binds equality and liberty to the civil society” and “presents a sense of continuity with the past and the future”. Omvedt replaces the word fraternity with “community” as an important component of a human vision for the new (...)
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  6.  55
    Jeremy Bentham, the French Revolution and political radicalism.Philip Schofield - 2004 - History of European Ideas 30 (4):381-401.
    An unresolved debate in Bentham scholarship concerns the question of the timing and circumstances which led to Bentham's ‘conversion’ to democracy, and thus to political radicalism. In the early stages of the French Revolution, Bentham composed material which appeared to justify equality of suffrage on utilitarian grounds, but there are differing interpretations concerning the extent and depth of Bentham's commitment to democracy at this time. The appearance of Rights, Representation, and Reform: Nonsense upon Stilts and other essays on (...)
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  7.  19
    Collective Violence and Collective Loyalties in France: Why the French Revolution Made a Difference.William H. Sewell - 1990 - Politics and Society 18 (4):527-552.
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  8.  13
    Theorising French neoliberalism: The technocratic elite, decentralised collective bargaining and France’s ‘passive neoliberal revolution’.Charles Masquelier - 2021 - European Journal of Social Theory 24 (1):65-85.
    Despite experiencing an early and protracted neoliberal transformation, France has exhibited an acutely ambiguous stance towards neoliberal practice. This is illustrated by, for example, regular nationwide protests opposed to policies with an overtly neoliberal flavour, or the coexistence of heavy taxation and a profound financialisation of its economy. This article seeks to explain why neoliberalism successfully developed in France, despite such an ambiguity. The focus will be placed on the transformation of labour relations, which will reveal the important role played (...)
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  9. Vindication of the French Revolution of February 1848.John Stuart Mill - 1996 - In Collected Works of John Stuart Mill: Autobiography and Literary Essays. Vol. 1. Collected Works of John Stuart. pp. 317-364.
     
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  10. Carlyle's French Revolution.John Stuart Mill - 1996 - In Collected Works of John Stuart Mill: Autobiography and Literary Essays. Vol. 1. Collected Works of John Stuart. pp. 131-166.
     
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  11. Mignet's French Revolution.John Stuart Mill - 1996 - In Collected Works of John Stuart Mill: Autobiography and Literary Essays. Vol. 1. Collected Works of John Stuart. pp. 1-14.
     
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  12.  34
    Socially conditioned mathematical change: the case of the French Revolution.Eduard Glas - 2002 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 33 (4):709-728.
    This paper examines a historical case of conceptual change in mathematics that was fundamental to its progress. I argue that in this particular case, the change was conditioned primarily by social processes, and these are reflected in the intellectual development of the discipline. Reorganization of mathematicians and the formation of a new mathematical community were the causes of changes in intellectual content, rather than being mere effects. The paper focuses on the French Revolution, which gave rise to revolutionary (...)
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  13.  3
    Carl Schmitt, Rousseau, and the French Revolution.William L. Patch - 2024 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2024 (208):43-64.
    ExcerptNow a century old, Carl Schmitt’s The Crisis of Parliamentary Democracy still provides useful training for historians in the necessary task of making distinctions between “liberalism” and “democracy,” two movements that arose with overlapping but distinct core principles in eighteenth-century Europe, often competed with each other, and sometimes came into bloody conflict. Schmitt makes one highly controversial assertion, however, near the beginning of this book. After agreeing with Alexis de Tocqueville that the spread of democracy was the most powerful political (...)
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  14.  2
    Translating revolution into poetry: the case of Marie-Joseph Chénier’s hymns.Gauthier Ambrus - forthcoming - History of European Ideas.
    The hymns of the French Revolution have not yet attracted much attention from historians, who generally consider them as accessory ornaments of civic festivals. However, their omnipresence during the decade 1790–1799 – reflecting considerable institutional as well as collective emotion investment – contradict this rather summary judgment. This article shows how revolutionary hymns constituted one of the most representative and original artistic-political experiments of the period, whose role was to translate political discourse into collective emotions. Their main architect (...)
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  15.  44
    Working-Class Women and Republicanism in the French Revolution of 1848.Judith DeGroat - 2012 - History of European Ideas 38 (3):399-407.
    Following the February Revolution in 1848, working-class women as well as men attempted to hold the government to its promise of the right to work, through street demonstrations, individual and collective demands for work, and participation in the national workshops that had been established in an attempt to address the problem of unemployment in the capital. In the process, these activists articulated what scholars have labelled as a democratic socialist vision of republicanism. In June of 1848, women participated in (...)
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  16. Alison's History of the French Revolution.John Stuart Mill - 1996 - In Collected Works of John Stuart Mill: Autobiography and Literary Essays. Vol. 1. Collected Works of John Stuart. pp. 111-122.
     
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  17.  27
    The double bind: The ambivalent treatment of traig passions in Hanna Arendt's theory of revolution.Artemy Magun - 2007 - History of Political Thought 28 (4):719-746.
    This article offers a close reading of Hannah Arendt's book On Revolution. It exposes the ambivalence of Arendt with regard to tragedy and mimesis. This ambivalence is not just her own; it is inherent in the treatment of tragedy and mimesis throughout the history of political thought. In spite of Arendt's argument that privileges the limited American Revolution against the boundless French one, in her rhetoric and in her storytelling Arendt presents a unitary but dialectical picture of (...)
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  18.  41
    After Revolution: Reading Rousseau in 1990s China.Els van Dongen & Yuan Chang - 2017 - Contemporary Chinese Thought 48 (1):1-13.
    ABSTRACTThis article reviews Zhu Xueqin’s writings on Jean-Jacques Rousseau against the background of the reception of Rousseau in China since the late nineteenth century. Rousseau was both an advocate and critic of the Enlightenment, and his work hence appealed to many Chinese intellectuals who struggled with the conundrum of how to modernize. During the late nineteenth century, Chinese supporters of Rousseau drew on his work to defend the viability of revolution. During the 1990s, following the tragedy of Tiananmen and (...)
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  19.  92
    Breve storia dell'etica.Sergio Cremaschi - 2012 - Roma RM, Italia: Carocci.
    The book reconstructs the history of Western ethics. The approach chosen focuses the endless dialectic of moral codes, or different kinds of ethos, moral doctrines that are preached in order to bring about a reform of existing ethos, and ethical theories that have taken shape in the context of controversies about the ethos and moral doctrines as means of justifying or reforming moral doctrines. Such dialectic is what is meant here by the phrase ‘moral traditions’, taken as a name for (...)
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  20.  1
    Overcoming Revolutions: Property, Independence, and Relation in Mary Wollstonecraft.Carlotta Cossutta - 2025 - Rivista Italiana di Filosofia Politica 7:103-121.
    The article examines Mary Wollstonecraft’s interpretation of revolutionary movements, particularly through her analysis of the French Revolution. Wollstonecraft examines the oppression of women as a form of slavery, but also uses it as a lens through which to denounce socio-economic injustices and propose radical change. Her critique of mercantile society and property contrasts with her rethinking of the domestic sphere as an alternative political space. The article shows how these reflections lead to a rethinking of femininity and the (...)
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  21.  25
    “Born with the taste for science and the arts”: The science and the aesthetics of Balthazar‐Georges Sage's mineralogy collections, 1783–18251. [REVIEW]Maddalena Napolitani - 2018 - Centaurus 60 (4):238-256.
    Balthazar-Georges Sage (1740–1824), a chemist, mineralogist, and the founder of the École Royale des Mines (1783), owned two mineral collections: a mineralogy collection used for his research and teaching, which later became the property of the École Royale itself; and a private cabinet of objets d'art, consisting largely of artistically worked mineral objects. Although created for different purposes, Sage valued both for their utility and their aesthetics. This paper explores the dual character of the collections by presenting Sage as a (...)
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  22.  30
    Révolution française et grammaire de la lutte de classes. Marx, Gramsci, Wittgenstein.Jacques Guilhaumou - 2015 - Actuel Marx 58 (2):76-92.
    The aim of this article is to analyze, by way of a linguistic connection between Marx, Gramsci and Wittgenstein, the possibility of a grammar of “class struggle” that is immanent to the action of the French Revolution. The French Revolutionary historiography has never been able to provide a grammatical explanation of the “real linguistic transactions” (Wittgenstein) between agents. Our discursive study thus focuses first on the various linguistic forms of individual identities, as certified in the grammar of (...)
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  23.  10
    Trading places: Accumulation as mediation in French ministry map depots, 1798–1810.Ralph Kingston - 2014 - History of Science 52 (3):247-276.
    During the French Revolution, the comparative geographer Jean-Denis Barbié du Bocage lost his patron, his job, and (most importantly) his access to source materials. Working for ministry map depots, however, he was able to forge new alliances and, by acting as a broker between different actors and interests, mobilize new networks of accumulation inside France and across central and eastern Europe. In these new centers of accumulation, Barbié translated the meanings and the significance of the objects he collected (...)
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  24.  13
    Reflections on the Revolution in France: An Abridgement with Supporting Texts.Brian R. Clack (ed.) - 2021 - Peterborough, CA: Broadview Press.
    This abridgement of _Reflections on the Revolution in France_ preserves the dynamism of Edmund Burke’s polemic while excising a number of detail-laden passages that may be of less interest to modern readers. Brian R. Clack’s introduction offers a compelling overview of the text and explores the consistency and coherence of Burke’s views on revolution. Burke’s critique of revolutionary politics is illuminated further by the extensive supplementary materials collected in a number of themed appendices.
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  25.  12
    Praxis and Revolution: A Theory of Social Transformation.Eva von Redecker - 2021 - Columbia University Press.
    The concept of revolution marks the ultimate horizon of modern politics. It is instantiated by sites of both hope and horror. Within progressive thought, “revolution” often perpetuates entrenched philosophical problems: a teleological philosophy of history, economic reductionism, and normative paternalism. At a time of resurgent uprisings, how can revolution be reconceptualized to grasp the dynamics of social transformation and disentangle revolutionary practice from authoritarian usurpation? Eva von Redecker reconsiders critical theory’s understanding of radical change in order to (...)
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  26.  52
    Revolution without Guarantees: Community and Subjectivity in Nancy, Lingis, Sartre and Levinas.Andrew Ryder - 2012 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 20 (1):115-128.
    Jean-Luc Nancy’s The Inoperative Community, a collection of writings first published in 1985 and 1986, suggests an understanding of community as irreducibly linked to finitude. Alongside this, he advocates a redefinition of the project of revolutionary communism. This endeavor draws equally on the writings on communication of Georges Bataille and the insistence on finitude found in Martin Heidegger. First, we should recapitulate Nancy’s argument in order to determine his presentation of a novel politics as well as the links and disjunctions (...)
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  27.  17
    The New Left and the 1960s: Collected Papers of Herbert Marcuse, Volume 3.Herbert Marcuse - 2004 - Routledge.
    The New Left and the 1960s is the third volume of Herbert Marcuse's collected papers. In 1964, Marcuse published a major study of advanced industrial society, One Dimensional Man , which was an important influence on the young radicals who formed the New Left. Marcuse embodied many of the defining political impulses of the New Left in his thought and politics - hence a younger generation of political activists looked up to him for theoretical and political guidance. The material collected (...)
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  28.  21
    A Brief History of the Masses: Three Revolutions.Stefan Jonsson - 2008 - Columbia University Press.
    Stefan Jonsson uses three monumental works of art to build a provocative history of popular revolt: Jacques-Louis David's _The Tennis Court Oath_ (1791), James Ensor's _Christ's Entry into Brussels in 1889_ (1888), and Alfredo Jaar's _They Loved It So Much, the Revolution_ (1989). Addressing, respectively, the French Revolution of 1789, Belgium's proletarian messianism in the 1880s, and the worldwide rebellions and revolutions of 1968, these canonical images not only depict an alternative view of history but offer a new (...)
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  29. The New Left and the 1960s: Collected Papers of Herbert Marcuse, Volume 3.Douglas Kellner (ed.) - 2004 - Routledge.
    _The New Left and the 1960s _is the third volume of Herbert Marcuse's collected papers. In 1964, Marcuse published a major study of advanced industrial society, _One Dimensional Man_, which was an important influence on the young radicals who formed the New Left. Marcuse embodied many of the defining political impulses of the New Left in his thought and politics - hence a younger generation of political activists looked up to him for theoretical and political guidance. The material collected in (...)
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  30.  5
    Paine and Jefferson in the Age of Revolutions.Simon P. Newman & Peter S. Onuf (eds.) - 2013 - Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.
    The enormous popularity of his pamphlet Common Sense made Thomas Paine one of the best-known patriots during the early years of American independence. His subsequent service with the Continental Army, his publication of The American Crisis (1776-83), and his work with Pennsylvania's revolutionary government consolidated his reputation as one of the foremost radicals of the Revolution. Thereafter, Paine spent almost fifteen years in Europe, where he was actively involved in the French Revolution, articulating his radical social, economic, (...)
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  31.  15
    The time of the landscape: on the origins of the aesthetic revolution.Jacques Rancière - 2023 - Cambridge: Polity Press. Edited by Emiliano Battista.
    The time of the landscape is not the time when people started describing landscapes in poems or representing gardens in works of art: it is the time when the landscape imposed itself as a specific object of thought. This object of thought was constituted through quarrels about how gardens were to be arranged, through accounts of travels to solitary lakes and remote mountains, or through evocations of mythological or rustic paintings. Jacques Rancière retraces these narratives and quarrels, showing how they (...)
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  32.  30
    Canon and the Revolution: The Role of the Concept of Scientific Revolution in Establishing the History of Science as a Discipline.Svit Komel - 2023 - Filozofski Vestnik 43 (1).
    Slovenian epistemology is characterised by an idiosyncratic canon, based on three fundamental authors: Gaston Bachelard, Alexandre Koyré, and Thomas Kuhn. What binds this canon together is the attitude that the history of science should be viewed as a history of radical breaks or revolutions in scientific thought. The drawback of such an anthology of authors is not only that it is outdated, but that, from the position of this canon, it is difficult to discern the problems stemming from the approach (...)
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  33.  15
    Change from Within: Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France.Tristan Rogers - 2024 - The Philosophy Teaching Library.
    Edmund Burke was an Irish-born British statesman and political philosopher who is best known as the father of modern conservatism. Developed in response to the French Revolution, Burke's conservatism aims to preserve and promote the existing (or traditional) institutions of society, including the rule of law, property, the family, and religion. Burke himself sought to defend these things, as embodied in the British Constitution, against the revolutionary spirit sparked in France. In his Reflections on the Revolution in (...)
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  34.  16
    The Collected Works of Jeremy Bentham: Political Tactics.Jeremy Bentham - 1999 - Clarendon Press.
    Political Tactics, composed for the Estates General just before the French Revolution, is one of Bentham's most original works. It contains the earliest and perhaps most important theoretical analysis of parliamentary procedure ever written. It was subsequently translated into many languages and has had a far-reaching influence -- as recently as the early 1990s it was reprinted by the Spanish Cortes.
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  35.  11
    Collected Works of John Stuart Mill: Autobiography and Literary Essays. Vol. 1.John Stuart Mill - 1996 - Collected Works of John Stuart.
    J.S. Mill's deep interest in French intellectual, political, and social affairs began in 1820 when, in his fourteenth year, he went to France to live for a year with the family of Sir Samuel Bentham. French became his second language, and France his second home, where he died and was buried in 1873. His interest in history began even earlier when, as a child of seven, he tried to imitate his father's labours on the History of British India; (...)
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  36.  9
    The General Will is Citizenship: Inquiries Into French Political Thought.Jason Andrew Neidleman - 2000 - Rowman & Littlefield Publishers.
    In The General Will is Citizenship, Jason Neidleman advances a republican conception of citizenship, which is described and defended through a piercing analysis of the general will in the writings of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, leaders of the French Revolution, and Restoration-era liberals. Neidleman explains that the "general will" is the will members of society have qua citizen, as opposed to the will they have qua private individual. It encapsulates tensions fundamental to egalitarian politics—tensions between individual autonomy and the collective (...)
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  37.  25
    De natuurwet bij Edmund Burke over de grondslagen Van het conservatisme.André Van de Putte - 1992 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 54 (3):393-423.
    In this study, an attempt is made to understand why Burke at the same time refers to the natural law and to the principle of inheritance as moral standards for the human will. Indeed, the latter principle implies reverence to a particular tradition, whereas natural law is a universal standard, binding all people. First, the meaning of the principle of inheritance in Burke's critique of the French Revolution is explained, and next the conception of the natural law he (...)
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  38.  19
    State Tasks and Human Rights.Erhard Denninger - 1999 - Ratio Juris 12 (1):1-10.
    This paper analyses the change in the notion of fundamental and human rights in Germany and throughout the European Union during the process of European integration. This change, that can be summarized in the formula “from human rights to state tasks,” signifies the integration and partial amendment of the French Revolution's ideals (liberté, égalité, fraternité) with the new ideals of security, diversity and solidarity. These new ideals make it necessary for the state to play a positive role in (...)
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  39.  13
    Democracy Past and Future.Pierre Rosanvallon (ed.) - 2006 - Columbia University Press.
    _Democracy Past and Future_ is the first English-language collection of Pierre Rosanvallon's most important essays on the historical origins, contemporary difficulties, and future prospects of democratic life. One of Europe's leading political thinkers, Rosanvallon proposes in these essays new readings of the history, aims, and possibilities of democratic theory and practice, and provides unique theoretical understandings of key moments in democracy's trajectory, from the French Revolution and the struggles for universal suffrage to European unification and the crises of (...)
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  40.  45
    Rousseau's counter-enlightenment: a republican critique of the philosophes.Graeme Garrard - unknown
    Arguing that the question of Jean-Jacques Rousseau's relationship to the Enlightenment has been eclipsed and seriously distorted by his association with the French Revolution, Graeme Garrard presents the first book-length case that shows Rousseau as the pivotal figure in the emergence of Counter-Enlightenment thought. Viewed in the context in which he actually lived and wrote -- from the middle of the eighteenth century to his death in 1778 -- it is apparent that Rousseau categorically rejected the Enlightenment "republic (...)
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  41.  15
    Unsolved problems in the bibliography of J.-J. Rousseau.R. A. Leigh - 1990 - Cambridge ;: Cambridge University Press. Edited by J. T. A. Leigh.
    Philosophers and historians of the French Revolution have seen Rousseau's influence as the decisive link between the doctrines of the Enlightenment and the practice of its revolutionary disciples. Professor Leigh here addresses the bibliographical foundations of that question, without which all attempts to settle it in the past have lacked authority. Introducing the most advanced techniques to identify variant and pirate editions of Rousseau's writings, he establishes that there were at least 28 separate imprints and an additional 12 (...)
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  42. ‘Esprit de Corps’ and the French Revolutionary Crisis: a Prehistory of the Concept of Solidarity.Luis de Miranda - 2015 - Historisch-Kulturwissenschaftliche Fakultät Portal.
    The word solidarity is a borrowing from the French solidarité, which until the nineteenth century had the restricted legal meaning of a contractual obligation. I argue that in the pre-revolutionary decades, a newly born French lexeme was much closer to what solidarity would mean for modern societies, at least if we accept the agonistic context of most phenomena of solidarity: ‘esprit de corps’, taken from the military language and changed into a combat concept by the Philosophes. A ‘corps’ (...)
     
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  43. World in fragments: writings on politics, society, psychoanalysis, and the imagination.Cornelius Castoriadis - 1997 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press. Edited by David Ames Curtis.
    This collection presents a broad and compelling overview of the most recent work by a world-renowned figure in contemporary thought. The book is in four parts: Koinonia, Polis, Psyche, Logos. The opening section begins with a general introduction to the author's views on being, time, creation, and the imaginary institution of society and continues with reflections on the role of the individual psyche in racist thinking and acting. The second part is a critique of those who now belittle and distort (...)
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  44.  15
    The Cambridge Companion to German Idealism (review).Jeffery Kinlaw - 2001 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 39 (4):596-597.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Journal of the History of Philosophy 39.4 (2001) 596-597 [Access article in PDF] Karl Ameriks, editor. The Cambridge Companion to German Idealism. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000. Pp. xiii + 306. Cloth, $54.95. Paper, $19.95. This recently published volume is a welcome and timely addition to the Cambridge Companion series. The past two decades have witnessed a renewed and now burgeoning interest in post-Kantian German philosophy, notably among (...)
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  45.  1
    Historical Essays.Chris Ramon Vanden Bossche (ed.) - 2002 - University of California Press.
    Thomas Carlyle, renowned nineteenth-century essayist and social critic, came to be thought of as a secular prophet by many of his readers and as the "undoubted head of English letters" by Ralph Waldo Emerson. _Historical Essays _brings together Carlyle's essays on history and historical subjects in a fully annotated modern edition for the first time. These essays, which were originally collected in _Critical and Miscellaneous Essays, _span Carlyle's career from 1830 to 1875 and represent a major facet of his writings. (...)
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  46.  25
    From Domination to Autonomy: Two Eras of Progress in World-sociological Perspective.Peter Wagner - 2022 - Антиномии 22 (3):72-95.
    In recent decades, the belief in progress that was widespread across the two centuries following the French Revolution has withered away. This article suggests, though, that the diagnosis of the end of progress can be used as an occasion to rethink what progress meant and what it might mean today. The proposal for rethinking proceeds in two big steps. First, the meaning of progress that was inherited from the Enlightenment is reconstructed and contrasted with the way progress actually (...)
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  47.  26
    Museums in transition: Thoughts from an empiricist.Sean Ulmer - 2007 - Journal of Aesthetic Education 41 (2):4-11.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Museums in Transition:Thoughts from an EmpiricistSean UlmerIn March 2005 Daniel Siedell, curator of the Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery and Sculpture Garden at the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, approached me with an invitation to participate in a symposium for the Journal of Aesthetic Education that he was guest editing. He said that the symposium would be dedicated to curatorial and educational issues and suggested that each of the contributors (...)
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  48.  26
    (1 other version)La República Independente, El Poder Constituyente y El Héroe de la Emancipación.Patrice Vermeren - 2011 - Revista de filosofía (Chile) 67:65-85.
    ¿Qué es un héroe de la emancipación? Rousseau comparaba el héroe antiguo, un guerrero triunfante que vence a los enemigos de su país, con el verdadero héroe, aquel que es capaz de posponer su singularidad en vistas a promover la acción común del pueblo soberano. De acuerdo con Miguel Abensour, la Revolución francesa redefine el heroísmo político como la capacidad de iniciar algo cuyo resultado es aún imprevisible, estableciendo así una nueva sociedad en la cual las figuras del héroe y (...)
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  49.  22
    The General Will: The Evolution of a Concept.James Farr & David Lay Williams (eds.) - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    Although it originated in theological debates, the general will ultimately became one of the most celebrated and denigrated concepts emerging from early modern political thought. Jean-Jacques Rousseau made it the central element of his political theory, and it took on a life of its own during the French Revolution, before being subjected to generations of embrace or opprobrium. James Farr and David Lay Williams have collected for the first time a set of essays that track the evolving history (...)
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  50. Adjudicating Between Competing Social Descriptions: The Critical, Empirical and Narrative Dimensions.Nancy Fraser - 1980 - Dissertation, City University of New York
    An important consideration which runs through the adjudication process in each dimension is that of insight vs. blindness. Whether it is a question of deciding if one description is a persuasive critique of another, or which of two rivals is more adequate empirically, or which is a more plausible and convincing narrative, one is always involved in assessing how far and how much each of the accounts permits us to see. The centrality of this notion certifies the inescapably hermeneutical character (...)
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