Beställningsvara. Skickas inom 10-15 vardagar. Fri frakt för medlemmar vid köp för minst 249 kr.
The concept of the subject remains one of the most important and debated notions in social theory and philosophy. Whether it is adopted as a central notion of personhood or rejected as a product of ideology or fiction, its usage has been a theme in a variety of political and speculative thought. Unfortunately, the prevalence of the term has often rendered its meaning opaque. Being Subjects examines the history of this notion from Descartes to the present and discusses its emergence as a philosophical category as well as its connection to related notions such as essence and being. Drawing from the tradition of Fanon’s revolutionary existentialism and a historical materialist approach to thought, J. Moufawad-Paul argues that despite the rejection of the subject by thinkers such as Althusser and Foucault, thinking the subject remains a meaningful philosophical practice for a politics dedicated to radical social transformation. If we can think through the category of the subject, we can also think through the legacy of modernity which includes settler-colonialism, slavery, and capitalism. We can also think through a conception of transformative subjectivity and the path to a new personhood and collective agency beyond this legacy’s weight of dead generations.
J. Moufawad-Paul is professor of philosophy at York University and is the author of Continuity and Rupture, The Communist Necessity, Politics in Command, and other books.
Foreword, D.Z. ShawPrologueChapter 1: The Meaning of SubjectChapter 2: Subject and IdeologyChapter 3: Subject and BeingChapter 4: Subject as Assemblage, Partisan, CollectiveEpilogue: The Subjective FactorAcknowledgmentsIndexAbout the Author
Provocative insurgent philosophy! Being Subjects: Preliminary Materials of the Person is a comprehensive intervention on the question of human subjectivity. J. Moufawad Paul challenges the reader with a rigorous interrogation of the Subject driven by an emancipatory imperative towards ongoing class struggle mediated by Black liberation discourse and anti-colonial thought.