What is Political Theory and Why Do We Need It?
Price: 595.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198088394
Publication date:
06/08/2012
Paperback
424 pages
215x140mm
Price: 595.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198088394
Publication date:
06/08/2012
Paperback
424 pages
Rajeev Bhargava
Essays by one of India's most distinguished political theorists,Relevant not only for India but the modern world in general,Covers wide-ranging issues related to political theory, multiculturalism, political secularism, socialist ideas, and modernity
Rights: World Rights
Rajeev Bhargava
Description
Political theory is widely seen in India as an esoteric inquiry unrelated to social and political practice and largely irrelevant to the urgent or enduring problems of our times. Contrary to this view, Rajeev Bhargava argues that it emerges from practices and has the potential to return to them-to stabilize, endorse, or challenge them. In this book, he explains the constitutive features of political theory and the pivotal role it can play in modern, pluralist societies.
Bhargava elucidates the conceptual structure of secularism, multiculturalism, and socialism, identifying which forms of each of these are worth defending and
why. He shows how politico-moral reasoning can shape appropriate responses to the grave injustice of states and communities-colonialism, civil wars, massacres, acts of terrorism, and denials of freedom of expression. He opposes naive articulations of modernity and tradition and claims that some types of deeply religious and secular persons can come together against dangerously simple-minded believers and unbelievers. He also explores deeper issues in the philosophy of social science-individualism, ethnocentrism, teleology, social ontology, and the object-like presence of social meanings.
About the author
Rajeev Bhargava, Director, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS), DelhiRajeev Bhargava is Director, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS), Delhi.
Rajeev Bhargava
Table of contents
Preface
Publisher's Acknowledgements
I WHAT IS POLITICAL THEORY AND WHY DO WE NEED IT?
1. What is Political Theory?
2. Why do We Need Political Theory?
3. Is There an Indian Political Theory?;
II NORMATIVE FRAMEWORKS
4. Political Secularism
5. The Multicultural Framework
6. The Continuing Relevance of Socialism
III IN THE FACE OF INJUSTICE
7. How Should We Respond to the Cultural Injustices of Colonialism?
8. Restoring Decency to Barbaric Societies
9. Ordinary Feelings, Extraordinary Events: Moral Complexity in 9/11
10. Literature, Censorship, and Democracy
IV MODERNITY AND IDENTITY
11. Religious and Secular Identities
12. Are there Alternative Modernities?
V PHILOSOPHY OF SOCIAL SCIENCE
13. Holism and Individualism in History and Social Science
14. What Makes Something Social?
15. Teleology and Ethnocentrism in Social Science
16. 'Objective Significance' in Critical Social Theory
Index
Rajeev Bhargava
Description
Political theory is widely seen in India as an esoteric inquiry unrelated to social and political practice and largely irrelevant to the urgent or enduring problems of our times. Contrary to this view, Rajeev Bhargava argues that it emerges from practices and has the potential to return to them-to stabilize, endorse, or challenge them. In this book, he explains the constitutive features of political theory and the pivotal role it can play in modern, pluralist societies.
Bhargava elucidates the conceptual structure of secularism, multiculturalism, and socialism, identifying which forms of each of these are worth defending and
why. He shows how politico-moral reasoning can shape appropriate responses to the grave injustice of states and communities-colonialism, civil wars, massacres, acts of terrorism, and denials of freedom of expression. He opposes naive articulations of modernity and tradition and claims that some types of deeply religious and secular persons can come together against dangerously simple-minded believers and unbelievers. He also explores deeper issues in the philosophy of social science-individualism, ethnocentrism, teleology, social ontology, and the object-like presence of social meanings.
About the author
Rajeev Bhargava, Director, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS), DelhiRajeev Bhargava is Director, Centre for the Study of Developing Societies (CSDS), Delhi.
Table of contents
Preface
Publisher's Acknowledgements
I WHAT IS POLITICAL THEORY AND WHY DO WE NEED IT?
1. What is Political Theory?
2. Why do We Need Political Theory?
3. Is There an Indian Political Theory?;
II NORMATIVE FRAMEWORKS
4. Political Secularism
5. The Multicultural Framework
6. The Continuing Relevance of Socialism
III IN THE FACE OF INJUSTICE
7. How Should We Respond to the Cultural Injustices of Colonialism?
8. Restoring Decency to Barbaric Societies
9. Ordinary Feelings, Extraordinary Events: Moral Complexity in 9/11
10. Literature, Censorship, and Democracy
IV MODERNITY AND IDENTITY
11. Religious and Secular Identities
12. Are there Alternative Modernities?
V PHILOSOPHY OF SOCIAL SCIENCE
13. Holism and Individualism in History and Social Science
14. What Makes Something Social?
15. Teleology and Ethnocentrism in Social Science
16. 'Objective Significance' in Critical Social Theory
Index
Pachimi Gyanodyay ke Vaicharik Sankat
Vishwanath Mishra