Michael Marder's patient and lucid work reminds us how categories and concepts are different, and that a phenomenological approach, allied with Kantian reflection, can help us think about political matters through an expanded and refined understanding of political categories. In a political world where simplistic reductions tend to reign, Marder offers a thoughtful reconsideration of categories as offering greater descriptive power and critical complexity than concepts that suppress the specificity of political phenomena. This is an important book that gives us both the example and the ideal of a political philosophy tasked with understanding the field of conflict in the service of an expansive pluralism.
- Judith Butler, Maxine Elliot Professor of Comparative Literature and Critical Theory, University of California, Berkeley,
Michael Marder's <i>Political Categories</i> is much more than a book about politics. It takes a step back and looks at the conceptual apparatus we rely on when we talk about politics and engage in it. As such, it is indispensable for everyone who is not only politically active but also wants to know what they are doing when they are politically active.
- Slavoj Žižek, author of <i>Disparities</i> and <i>The Incontinence of the Void</i>,
<i>Political Categories</i> proposes nothing less than a new way of thinking about politics and such political ideas and institutions as the state, sovereignty, power, and revolution. The question is how to define what is proper or singular to politics without isolating it from other spheres of human activity and thought. What makes politics politics? In this book, Marder finds a novel way of viewing the meaning of politics and its relation to nonpolitical realities.
- Daniel Innerarity, author of <i>Governance in the New Global Disorder</i>,
<i>Political Categories</i> is undoubtedly one of the most interesting books today for a new phenomenological approach to political theory...it sparks the curiosity of the reader.
- Mees van Hulzen, Leipzig University, Phenomenological Reviews
This is a remarkable book -- one of the most challenging and thought-provoking I have encountered in a very long time and, for this reason alone, richly deserving of attention.
- Nathan J. Jun, Midwestern State University, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
This is perhaps the most original and thought-provoking book of political theory this reviewer has read in years. Scholars in both political philosophy and political science will benefit from it . . . Highly recommended.
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