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Table of Contents
Intro
Acknowledgments
Contents
1: Introduction
Bibliography
2: Nationalism and Its Other
2.1 The "Society of Perpetual Growth" and the Unreconciled Tension Between Universalistic and Particularistic Tendencies in Gellner's Analysis
2.2 The "Imagined Community" and 'Modularity'
2.3 The Critique of Modularity: The Division Between the 'Spiritual' 'Inner' World and the 'Material' 'Outer' World
and the Problem with This Division When Understood Non-Dialectically
2.4 Summary of Our Critical Arguments, and the Task Ahead: The Main Contours of the Problematic
4.2 "Force and Understanding"
4.3 Methodological Distinctions Between Kant and Husserl
and the Sense of 'Crisis'
4.4 'Crisis', Negativity and Historicity
4.5 Urstiftung, Nachstiftung, Endstiftung
Bibliography
5: Heidegger's Modernist Critique of Modernity: The Recovery of Negativity and Finitude
5.1 'Ontological Difference', the Temporality of 'Care' and 'Being-Towards-Death'
5.2 The Question of Metaphysics
5.3 The Question of Technology
5.4 The Question of the Environment
Bibliography
6: The Impasse of the Political: Rethinking the Universal
6.1 Transition to the Political
6.2 The Possibility of Unalienated Existence in Relation to Historical Becoming: Evolutionary Versus Repetitive History
6.3 The 'Other' Vision of History: The Communal Form and Its Repetition in the Asiatic, Ancient and Germanic Modes of Production
6.4 The Problem of the 'Asiatic Mode' and the Possibility of Evolutionary History
6.5 Marx's Analysis of the Commodity Form as a Critique of 'Presence'
6.6 The Generalization of Commodity Fetishism in the Money Commodity: Circulation, Temporality, and the Proliferation of Symbols
6.7 How Marx 'Invented the Symptom': Alienation and Therapeutic Response
Bibliography
7: Dialectics and the Universal in Process
7.1 On the Possibility of Proletarian 'Universal' Class Consciousness
7.2 The Generalization of the Commodity Form and the Reification Inherent in It: Lukács and the Possibility of Proletarian Class Consciousness
7.3 Contingency, Hegemony, Universality, and the Political
Bibliography
8: Unalienated Life and Negative Dialectics
8.1 The Realization of Unalienated Life in Post-Capitalist Society: Political-Economic Relations
Acknowledgments
Contents
1: Introduction
Bibliography
2: Nationalism and Its Other
2.1 The "Society of Perpetual Growth" and the Unreconciled Tension Between Universalistic and Particularistic Tendencies in Gellner's Analysis
2.2 The "Imagined Community" and 'Modularity'
2.3 The Critique of Modularity: The Division Between the 'Spiritual' 'Inner' World and the 'Material' 'Outer' World
and the Problem with This Division When Understood Non-Dialectically
2.4 Summary of Our Critical Arguments, and the Task Ahead: The Main Contours of the Problematic
4.2 "Force and Understanding"
4.3 Methodological Distinctions Between Kant and Husserl
and the Sense of 'Crisis'
4.4 'Crisis', Negativity and Historicity
4.5 Urstiftung, Nachstiftung, Endstiftung
Bibliography
5: Heidegger's Modernist Critique of Modernity: The Recovery of Negativity and Finitude
5.1 'Ontological Difference', the Temporality of 'Care' and 'Being-Towards-Death'
5.2 The Question of Metaphysics
5.3 The Question of Technology
5.4 The Question of the Environment
Bibliography
6: The Impasse of the Political: Rethinking the Universal
6.1 Transition to the Political
6.2 The Possibility of Unalienated Existence in Relation to Historical Becoming: Evolutionary Versus Repetitive History
6.3 The 'Other' Vision of History: The Communal Form and Its Repetition in the Asiatic, Ancient and Germanic Modes of Production
6.4 The Problem of the 'Asiatic Mode' and the Possibility of Evolutionary History
6.5 Marx's Analysis of the Commodity Form as a Critique of 'Presence'
6.6 The Generalization of Commodity Fetishism in the Money Commodity: Circulation, Temporality, and the Proliferation of Symbols
6.7 How Marx 'Invented the Symptom': Alienation and Therapeutic Response
Bibliography
7: Dialectics and the Universal in Process
7.1 On the Possibility of Proletarian 'Universal' Class Consciousness
7.2 The Generalization of the Commodity Form and the Reification Inherent in It: Lukács and the Possibility of Proletarian Class Consciousness
7.3 Contingency, Hegemony, Universality, and the Political
Bibliography
8: Unalienated Life and Negative Dialectics
8.1 The Realization of Unalienated Life in Post-Capitalist Society: Political-Economic Relations