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This book studies the role of serious philosophizing in everyday
life and looks at how authoritarianism negates philosophical and
public reason. It sheds light on how philosophy can go beyond its
life as a discipline limited to an esoteric group of academia to
manifest itself via radical discursive practices in public life
which enable us to understand and resolve contemporary
socio-political challenges. It studies philosophy as a discipline
which deals with one's orientations based on experience, the logic
of reasoning, critical thinking, and most of all radical and
progressive beliefs. The book argues that the contemporary rise of
capitalism in modern society, resonating Émile Durkheim’s
cautions on "anomie", has favoured individualism, differentiation,
marginalization, and exploitation, balanced on an eroding
collective consciousness and a steady disintegration of humanity
and reason. Taking this into consideration, it discusses how
philosophy, both mainstream and marginal, can revive democracy in
society which then is able to confront global authoritarianism led
by the figure of the imbecile. Finally, it also provides a range of
new perspectives on the questions of civic freedom, hegemony of
language, social justice, identity, invisible paradigms, gender
justice, democracy, multiculturalism, and decolonization. This book
is an invigorating compilation of essays from diverse disciplines,
engaging the need to create a humanistic public philosophy to
transcend the state of imbecility. It will be of great interest to
students, scholars and researchers of philosophy, contemporary
politics, history, and sociology, as well as general readers.
This book is a collection of essays by prominent thinkers on the
historist and humanist transcendence of the caste system such that
an authentic democracy can bloom in India. It locates caste as not
only a social problem, but a moral evil and schizophrenia affecting
India civilization. Besides reflecting on Jotiba Phule, Karl Marx,
and B.R. Ambedkar, this book also traverses through Nietzschean
genealogy, communalism in colonial India, the need for radical
education to fulfil the democratic revolution, the literature of
Triveni Sangh, questions of social exclusion and inequality, the
story of Eklavya in the Mahabharata and the asking of pertinent
questions to the Indian left. This book is co-published with Aakar
Books. Print edition not for sale in South Asia (India, Sri Lanka,
Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan and Bhutan)
The book The Magical Lantern is a collection of essays on Marxist
philosophy. It is based on the philosophical reflection on Marx's
idea of phantasmagoria as the 'magical lantern' that creates eerie
images, an idea that is central to Marx's theory of modern
capitalist societies. It talks of the importance of Marx's
philosophy and its application in concrete politics, especially in
creating socialist humanist philosophy of human emancipation where
global societies can be emancipated from the phantasmagorias that
haunt them, thus able to transcend global capitalism which is in
terminal and permanent crisis. It then critiques the rise of
authoritarian regimes emerging all over the world and seeks to
explain the rise of global totalitarianism. But it claims that the
answer to authoritarianism is not liberalism since liberalism is
part of the late imperialism in permanent crisis as well as it
involves what Slavoj Zizek calls the Denkverbot ('the prohibition
against thinking') and thus involves the return of the eerie
phantasmagoria that does not allow critical thinking. However, the
critique of liberalism does not relapse into orthodox Marxism,
since this book argues that in the genre of orthodox Marxism the
ghosts of Stalin and Mao with their own authoritarianism haunt
philosophies of human emancipation. While Stalin is portrayed as a
brutal counter-revolutionary who destroyed Marxism by evoking
Marxism itself, Mao is presented as the alchemist of the revolution
and a peculiar form of Stalinism in rebellion against Stalinism
itself! The chapters in this book were originally published in
Critique: Journal of Socialist Theory.
Essays on Marxism and Asia begins with the largely forgotten
prophet of ancient Iran Zarathushtra, remembered and immortalised
by Friedrich Nietzsche's Also Sprach Zarathustra. In contrast to
the infamous clash of civilisation thesis, this book argues for a
humanist theory of civilisations and studies the Parsis or Persians
who left Iran to settle in India and make it their home. It claims
that Parsis, despite being a migrant community, took strength from
their Persian heritage and civilisation and rose to become the
architects of industrial modernity in India. This book locates this
humanist theory in the larger genre of the Asiatic mode of
production with caste as its sub- text. It then takes a
phenomenological reading of caste in India and says that India is
afflicted by a very strange illness called 'silent blindness' where
humanity is silenced and blinded in front of the caste apparatus.
It then analyzes how capitalism and modernity fashioned caste in
the image of capitalism and how the Indian right- wing imagined its
fascistic politics of race and racial superiority based on the
image of caste hierarchy. The problem in India has been that the
liberals could not take caste seriously so as to confront it and
then annihilate this violent apartheid structure. This, the book
argues, has led to the rise of fascism in India. The book concludes
with positing two different strands of secularism, namely liberal
or bourgeois secularism which merely separates religion and the
state (but mixes these when required) and revolutionary secularism
which humanises religion and politics first in order to find the
human and class content in both. The chapters in this book were
originally published in Critique: Journal of Socialist Theory.
This book proposes a New Enlightenment - a new way of looking at
the non-Western world. Breaking new ground, the essays chart a
course beyond Eurocentric discourses (which completely ignore the
contributions of Asia, Africa and Latin-America) and forms of
nativism (which are usually ethnocentric discourses). The volume:
Focuses on the historical aspects of knowledge-production and its
colonization; Examines the genre of multilinear histories that
displaces hegemonic Eurocentric discourses; Enlarges the scope of
multilinear historicism whereby Asia, Europe, Africa and the
Americas are drawn in a new humanistic knowledge system; Studies
how colonization is resisted in both the non-Western and Western
world. Lucid and engaging, this book will be of great interest to
scholars and researchers of social theory, education, politics and
public policy.
This book studies the role of serious philosophizing in everyday
life and looks at how authoritarianism negates philosophical and
public reason. It sheds light on how philosophy can go beyond its
life as a discipline limited to an esoteric group of academia to
manifest itself via radical discursive practices in public life
which enable us to understand and resolve contemporary
socio-political challenges. It studies philosophy as a discipline
which deals with one's orientations based on experience, the logic
of reasoning, critical thinking, and most of all radical and
progressive beliefs. The book argues that the contemporary rise of
capitalism in modern society, resonating Emile Durkheim's cautions
on "anomie", has favoured individualism, differentiation,
marginalization, and exploitation, balanced on an eroding
collective consciousness and a steady disintegration of humanity
and reason. Taking this into consideration, it discusses how
philosophy, both mainstream and marginal, can revive democracy in
society which then is able to confront global authoritarianism led
by the figure of the imbecile. Finally, it also provides a range of
new perspectives on the questions of civic freedom, hegemony of
language, social justice, identity, invisible paradigms, gender
justice, democracy, multiculturalism, and decolonization. This book
is an invigorating compilation of essays from diverse disciplines,
engaging the need to create a humanistic public philosophy to
transcend the state of imbecility. It will be of great interest to
students, scholars and researchers of philosophy, contemporary
politics, history, and sociology, as well as general readers.
Essays on Marxism and Asia begins with the largely forgotten
prophet of ancient Iran Zarathushtra, remembered and immortalised
by Friedrich Nietzsche’s Also Sprach Zarathustra. In contrast to
the infamous clash of civilisation thesis, this book argues for a
humanist theory of civilisations and studies the Parsis or Persians
who left Iran to settle in India and make it their home. It claims
that Parsis, despite being a migrant community, took strength from
their Persian heritage and civilisation and rose to become the
architects of industrial modernity in India. This book locates this
humanist theory in the larger genre of the Asiatic mode of
production with caste as its sub- text. It then takes a
phenomenological reading of caste in India and says that India is
afflicted by a very strange illness called ‘silent blindness’
where humanity is silenced and blinded in front of the caste
apparatus. It then analyzes how capitalism and modernity fashioned
caste in the image of capitalism and how the Indian right- wing
imagined its fascistic politics of race and racial superiority
based on the image of caste hierarchy. The problem in India has
been that the liberals could not take caste seriously so as to
confront it and then annihilate this violent apartheid structure.
This, the book argues, has led to the rise of fascism in India. The
book concludes with positing two different strands of secularism,
namely liberal or bourgeois secularism which merely separates
religion and the state (but mixes these when required) and
revolutionary secularism which humanises religion and politics
first in order to find the human and class content in both. The
chapters in this book were originally published in Critique:
Journal of Socialist Theory.
The Prison House of Alienation is an exploration of the humanist
theme of alienation that Marx theorized in his Economic and
Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844. It relates this theme of
alienation with the themes of haunting in the Manifesto of the
Communist Party and accumulation of capital that he outlined in his
magnum opus Capital. The volume claims that humanity plagued by
ghosts is dwelling in a prison house from which there seems no
escape. Yet humanity seeks to escape from this prison house. The
essays are a consequent journey in dramaturgy where science and art
truly meet to create emancipatory politics that goes well beyond
the entire discourse of twentieth-century socialism. The volume
begins with Hamlet's lament in Shakespeare's tragedy, who, struck
by alienation, is haunted by the ghost of his dead father. It then
discusses how instead of creating a radical theory for creating a
socialist alternative, 'haunting' gave way to interpretation as an
estranged hermeneutical act that displaces revolutionary theory and
praxis. This displacement of revolutionary praxis in turn gave way
to violence. This volume therefore also analyzes violence from
Clausewitz to Mao, revealing that a rigorous line must be drawn
between Stalinism and Maoism on one side, and authentic Marxism on
the other side. It concludes by questioning the very idea of
ideology, suggesting that ideology is not merely a false
consciousness, but a terrible psychotic act that would devour the
entire emancipatory project of Marxism itself. Placing the human
condition at the centre for alternative twenty-first-century
politics, The Prison House of Alienation reveals that there can be
no science without art and no politics without humanity. It will be
of great interest to scholars of philosophy and politics. The
essays were originally published in various issues of Critique:
Journal of Socialist Theory.
This book proposes a New Enlightenment - a new way of looking at
the non-Western world. Breaking new ground, the essays chart a
course beyond Eurocentric discourses (which completely ignore the
contributions of Asia, Africa and Latin-America) and forms of
nativism (which are usually ethnocentric discourses). The volume:
Focuses on the historical aspects of knowledge-production and its
colonization; Examines the genre of multilinear histories that
displaces hegemonic Eurocentric discourses; Enlarges the scope of
multilinear historicism whereby Asia, Europe, Africa and the
Americas are drawn in a new humanistic knowledge system; Studies
how colonization is resisted in both the non-Western and Western
world. Lucid and engaging, this book will be of great interest to
scholars and researchers of social theory, education, politics and
public policy.
The Prison House of Alienation is an exploration of the humanist
theme of alienation that Marx theorized in his Economic and
Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844. It relates this theme of
alienation with the themes of haunting in the Manifesto of the
Communist Party and accumulation of capital that he outlined in his
magnum opus Capital. The volume claims that humanity plagued by
ghosts is dwelling in a prison house from which there seems no
escape. Yet humanity seeks to escape from this prison house. The
essays are a consequent journey in dramaturgy where science and art
truly meet to create emancipatory politics that goes well beyond
the entire discourse of twentieth-century socialism. The volume
begins with Hamlet's lament in Shakespeare's tragedy, who, struck
by alienation, is haunted by the ghost of his dead father. It then
discusses how instead of creating a radical theory for creating a
socialist alternative, 'haunting' gave way to interpretation as an
estranged hermeneutical act that displaces revolutionary theory and
praxis. This displacement of revolutionary praxis in turn gave way
to violence. This volume therefore also analyzes violence from
Clausewitz to Mao, revealing that a rigorous line must be drawn
between Stalinism and Maoism on one side, and authentic Marxism on
the other side. It concludes by questioning the very idea of
ideology, suggesting that ideology is not merely a false
consciousness, but a terrible psychotic act that would devour the
entire emancipatory project of Marxism itself. Placing the human
condition at the centre for alternative twenty-first-century
politics, The Prison House of Alienation reveals that there can be
no science without art and no politics without humanity. It will be
of great interest to scholars of philosophy and politics. The
essays were originally published in various issues of Critique:
Journal of Socialist Theory.
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