Columbia University Press
Alienation
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Translated by:
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Reviews
[A]n excellent representative of the work of a new generation of German philosophers who...seem well positioned to reanimate Western philosophy.
Rahel Jaeggi's Alienation is an important contribution to – and rejuvenation of – the philosophical literature on the phenomenon of alienation.
This insightful and learned book will appeal to anyone interested in social philosophy.
Frederick Neuhouser, Barnard College:
Alienation is one of the most exciting books to have appeared on the German philosophical scene in the last decade. It not only rejuvenates a lagging discourse on the topic of alienation; it also shows how an account of subjectivity elaborated two centuries ago can be employed in the service of new philosophical insights.
Matthias Fritsch, Concordia University:
Jaeggi's scholarship and writing in this book is excellent, and the resuscitation of the concept of alienation in critical social theory is a welcome event in the literature.
Terry Pinkard, Georgetown University:
Alienation, the concept Hegel and Marx made so central to European political and social thought, has receded in importance in recent political philosophy. Like self-deception and weakness of will, it is extremely resistant to analysis even though it continues to be a major theme of modern life and accounts for the features of contemporary life. Jaeggi's great accomplishment is to provide the outlines of a new theory of an old term and thereby show its linkage to major ethical and political concerns. With this book, an entire tradition of political and social philosophy receives a new lease on life.
Nancy Fraser, The New School:
With this masterful reconstruction of the concept of alienation, Jaeggi opens fruitful new avenues for critical theory. She also claims her place as a powerful exponent of social philosophy and a thinker of the first rank. Her book is a tour de force of cogent argumentation and rich phenomenological description.
Daniel Brudney, University of Chicago:
Through a compelling combination of acute analysis and rich phenomenological description, Rahel Jaeggi brings alienation back to the center of political philosophy. She argues alienation concerns a failure to appropriate oneself in the right way, a problem with how one comes to be what one is, rather than an inability to realize some pregiven identity. Jaeggi is not only thoroughly learned in both the continental and analytic traditions. She does what is quite rare: she brings these traditions into a highly productive synthesis. A very impressive achievement.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Foreword
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Translator’s Introduction
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Preface and Acknowledgments
xix - Part 1. The Relation of Relationlessness: Reconstructing a Concept of Social Philosophy
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1. “A Stranger in the World That He Himself Has Made”: The Concept and Phenomenon of Alienation
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2. Marx and Heidegger: Two Versions of Alienation Critique
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3. The Structure and Problems of Alienation Critique
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4. Having Oneself at One’s Command: Reconstructing the Concept of Alienation
32 - Part 2. Living One’s Life as an Alien Life: Four Cases
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5. Seinesgleichen Geschieht or “The Like of It Now Happens”: The Feeling of Powerlessness and the Independent Existence of One’s Own Actions
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6. “A Pale, Incomplete, Strange, Artificial Man”: Social Roles and the Loss of Authenticity
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7. “She but Not Herself”: Self-Alienation as Internal Division
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8. “As If Through a Wall of Glass”: Indifference and Self-Alienation
131 - Part 3. Alienation as a Disturbed Appropriation of Self and World
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9. “Like a Structure of Cotton Candy”: Being Oneself as Self-Appropriation
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10. “Living One’s Own Life”: Self-Determination, Self-Realization, and Authenticity
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Conclusion: The Sociality of the Self, the Sociality of Freedom
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Notes
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Works Cited
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Index
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