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Lived Fictions

Unity and Exclusion in Canadian Politics
  • John Grant
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2018
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About this book

Bringing big thinking back to Canadian politics, Lived Fictions demonstrates how theories of political unity always exclude and shows why our comfortable assumptions about the promises of Canadian politics mask historical failures.

Author / Editor information

John Grant is an assistant professor of political science at King’s University College at Western University. He is the author of Dialectics and Contemporary Politics: Critique and Transformation from Hegel through Post-Marxism (2011).

Reviews

Thirstan Falconer, St. Jerome's University:
[Grant's] analysis brilliantly redefines the boundaries of scholarly interrogation on questions of belonging and inequality.

David Laycock, professor, political science, Simon Fraser University:
In this book, John Grant accomplishes several achievements, any of which would be impressive on their own.

Yasmeen Abu-Laban, professor, Department of Political Science, University of Alberta:
This fascinating exploration challenges conventional wisdom and paves the way for thinking about belonging and inequality in new and constructive ways.

Melissa Williams, professor, Department of Political Science, University of Toronto:
Constitutionalism, the welfare state, multiculturalism, and reconciliation between Indigenous peoples and non-Indigenous Canadians. Aren’t these the hallmarks of Canada’s basic decency as a democratic society? With sparkling clarity and philosophical depth, Grant shows how each of these “lived fictions” of social unity also functions to mask unjust exclusions and inequalities – and helps us to reimagine a Canada whose democratic promise might be fulfilled.

Warren Magnusson, professor emeritus, Department of Political Science, University of Victoria:
John Grant demonstrates once again how important it is to bring the full resources of contemporary political theory to bear on Canadian problems. With full attention to the complex legacy of Western political thought, he critiques the “lived fictions” of constitutionalism, Crown sovereignty, neoliberalism, and multiculturalism now manifest in Canada, and articulates democratic alternatives already present in our emergent political imaginaries. As such, he offers reasons for hope in what others have perceived as dark times.


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Unity and Politics
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3
Imagining Unity and Exclusion

Visions of Political Unity
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Lived Fictions in Canadian Politics

Canada’s Constituent Power Problem
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Imaginaries of Sovereignty and Control
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A New Imaginary for the Welfare State
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The Dis/Unity of Cultures
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A Vision of Democratization
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Critique and Politics–Or, What Makes a Birthday Party Memorable
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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
March 15, 2018
eBook ISBN:
9780774836494
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
304
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