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A Philosophy of Nationhood and the Modern Self‘Self’ Under Scrutiny. On ‘Post-national’ Thought

A Philosophy of Nationhood and the Modern Self: ‘Self’ Under Scrutiny. On ‘Post-national’ Thought [In the final chapter of part 3 of the book, I address those thinkers to whom the very categories of self and subjectivity are problematic at best. Concepts of sovereignty, identity and citizenship are continuously undermined by the technological and socio-economical process which we call globalisation. I attempt to tackle some of the fundamental issues raised by what I call the ‘post-national’ thought (Hardt & Negri, Beck) by looking at whether the form of political identity represented by nationhood can continue to facilitate our engagement with what is ‘common’ or ‘public’.] http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png

A Philosophy of Nationhood and the Modern Self‘Self’ Under Scrutiny. On ‘Post-national’ Thought

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Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan US
Copyright
© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2017
ISBN
978-1-137-59505-8
Pages
151–168
DOI
10.1057/978-1-137-59506-5_9
Publisher site
See Chapter on Publisher Site

Abstract

[In the final chapter of part 3 of the book, I address those thinkers to whom the very categories of self and subjectivity are problematic at best. Concepts of sovereignty, identity and citizenship are continuously undermined by the technological and socio-economical process which we call globalisation. I attempt to tackle some of the fundamental issues raised by what I call the ‘post-national’ thought (Hardt & Negri, Beck) by looking at whether the form of political identity represented by nationhood can continue to facilitate our engagement with what is ‘common’ or ‘public’.]

Published: Mar 24, 2017

Keywords: Political Identity; Political Subjectivity; Global Order; Risk Society; Disciplinary Power

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