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¬A¬ critical theory of global justice: the Frankfurt School and world society
Kategorie Beschreibung
036aXA-GB‡XD-US
037beng
077a1828248843 Erscheint auch als (Druck-Ausgabe): ‡Ibsen, Malte Frøslee, 1983 - : ¬A¬ critical theory of global justice
087q0-19-286412-2
087q978-0-19-286412-3
100 Ibsen, Malte Frøslee ¬[VerfasserIn]¬
331 ¬A¬ critical theory of global justice
335 the Frankfurt School and world society
410 Oxford ; New York
412 Oxford University Press
425 [2023]
425a2023
433 1 Online-Ressource (viii, 367 Seiten)
451bOxford scholarship online
501 Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 353-362, Register
521 $tMax Horkheimer and the original paradigm of critical theory. Horkheimer's original paradigm and the idea of a critical theory of world society. Theodor W. Adorno and the negativist paradigm of critical theory. Adorno's negativist paradigm and the idea of a critical theory of world society. Jürgen Habermas and the communicative paradigm of critical theory. Habermas's communicative paradigm and the idea of a critical theory of world society. Axel honneth and the recognition paradigm of critical theory. Honneth's recognition paradigm and the idea of a critical theory of world society. Amy Allen's contextualist paradigm of critical theory. Rainer Forst's justification paradigm of critical theory
527 Erscheint auch als (Druck-Ausgabe): ‡Ibsen, Malte Frøslee, 1983 - : ¬A¬ critical theory of global justice
540aISBN 978-0-19-195469-6
700 |RS
700 |SB
700 |SK02
700b|301.01
700g1271507048 MK 4050
700g127142813X MR 5350
700g1270945432 MS 1290
750 The idea of a critical theory is famous across the world, yet it is today rarely practised as originally conceived by the Frankfurt School. The waning influence of critical theory in the contemporary academy may be due to its lack of engagement with global problems and the postcolonial condition. This book offers the first systematic treatment of the idea of a critical theory of world society, advancing the conversation between critical theory and postcolonial and ecological thought. Malte Frøslee Ibsen develops a reconstruction of the Frankfurt School tradition as four paradigms of critical theory, in original interpretations of the work of Max Horkheimer, Theodor W. Adorno, Jürgen Habermas, and Axel Honneth, and considers how the global context has featured in their work and what might be salvaged for a critical theory of contemporary world society. Along the way, Ibsen advances new interpretations of the relationship between critical theory and justice, the idea of communicative freedom, and three conceptions of power in the Frankfurt School tradition. He further offers extended discussions of two emerging paradigms in the work of Amy Allen and Rainer Forst and argues that a critical theory of world society must combine and integrate a Kantian constructivist approach in a critique of global injustice, as Forst defends, with the reflexive check of a self-problematizing critique of its blind spots and taken-for-granted assumptions regarding the postcolonial condition, as defended by Allen. Finally, Ibsen rethinks the relationship between society and nature in critical theory, with far-reaching normative and methodological implications.
902s 209583622 Weltordnung
902s 210396849 Soziale Gerechtigkeit
902s 208932763 Gerechtigkeit
902s 209559764 Internationale Gesellschaft
902s 209191619 Kritische Theorie
902s 209070080 Politische Theorie
902s 209201223 Politische Philosophie
902s 209205849 Soziologie
902s 209165138 Wissenschaft
902s 208933697 Geschichte
012 1839436468
081 Ibsen, Malte Frøslee: ¬A¬ critical theory of global justice
100 E-Book Oxford EBS
125aElektronischer Volltext - Campuslizenz
655e$uhttps://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192864123.001.0001
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