The question of possibility is raised in philosophy itself in different terms: as a question of potentiality and potentials but also as a question of the impossibilities of changing political order. In recent political discussions this question is more present than ever and is newly posed in fundamental ways by thinkers such as Agamben, Badiou, and Deleuze, or Lacan and Žižek. The present volume assembles articles that investigate this question and the new guise it took from different perspectives and highlight its relevance for contemporary political thought.
Table of Contents
Mark Potocnik, Frank Ruda, Jan Völker: Introduction
Alain Badiou: Politics: A Non-Expressive Dialectics
Lorenzo Chiesa: Notes Towards a Manifesto for Metacritical Realism
Frank Ruda: Back to the Factory. A Plea for a Renewal of Concrete Analysis of Concrete Situations
Jelica Šumic: Another World is Possible. or the Task of Philosophy in Worldless Times
Bruno Bosteels: Logics of Change. From Potentiality to Inexistence
Jan Völker: Proletarian Ideology. Or How to Turn Politics Against Aesthetics
Felix Ensslin: Potentiality in Agamben
Friedrich Balke: Endless Expropriations of the Body. On the Relation between Politics and Potentialities in the Story of Lucretia
Mark Potocnik: People/Population. The Problem of Site in Foucault
Jason E. Smith: Strategy and the Passions. Guy Debord’s Ruses
Peter Hallward: The Will of the People. Notes Towards a Dialectical Voluntarism
Contributors
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