Skip to product information
1 of 1

Friendship Reconsidered

Regular price $75.00
Regular price $75.00 Sale price $75.00
Sold out
Digeser contends that our rich and varied practices of friendship multiply and moderate connections to politics. Along the way, she sets forth a series of ideals that appreciates friendship’s many ...
Read More
  • 06 September 2016
View Product Details

In the history of Western thought, friendship's relationship to politics is checkered. Friendship was seen as key to understanding political life in the ancient world, but it was then ignored for centuries. Today, friendship has again become a desirable framework for political interaction. In Friendship Reconsidered, P. E. Digeser contends that our rich and varied practices of friendship multiply and moderate connections to politics. Along the way, she sets forth a series of ideals that appreciates friendship's many forms and its dynamic relationship to individuality, citizenship, political and legal institutions, and international relations.

Digeser argues that, as a set of practices bearing a family resemblance to one another, friendship calls our attention to the importance of norms of friendly action and the mutual recognition of motive. Focusing on these attributes clarifies the place of self-interest and duty in friendship and points to its compatibility with the pursuit of individuality. She shows how friendship can provide islands of stability in a sea of citizen-strangers and, in a delegitimized political environment, a bridge between differences. She also explores how political and legal institutions can both undermine and promote friendship. Digeser then looks to the positive potential of international friendships, in which states mutually strive to protect the just character of one another's institutions and policies. Friendship's repertoire of motives and manifestations complicates its relationship to politics, Digeser concludes, but it can help us realize the limits and possibilities for generating new opportunities for cooperation.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $75.00
Pages: 392
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 06 September 2016
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231174343
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: PHILOSOPHY / Political, POLITICAL SCIENCE / History & Theory, PHILOSOPHY / Ethics & Moral Philosophy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General, PHILOSOPHY / Social
REVIEWS Icon
This engaging work impressively brings together discussions about friendship in political philosophy, ethics, and international relations to create a rich and stimulating conversation about the nature, role, and value of friendship in political life.
P. E. Digeser is professor of political science at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She is the author of Our Politics, Our Selves? Liberalism, Identity, and Harm (1995) and Political Forgiveness (2001), and the editor of Richard Flathman: Situated Concepts, Virtuosity Liberalism, and Opalescent Individuality (2016).

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part 1
1. Friendship as a Family of Practices
2. Motivations, Actions, and the Value of Friendship
3. Self-Interest, Duty, and Friendship
4. Friendship and Individuality
Part 2
5. Civic Friendship
6. Friendship During Dark Times
7. Institutions for and Against Friendship
Part 3
8. Friendship and Friend in an International Context
9. International Friendships of Character
10. The Politics of International Friendships
Notes
Bibliography
Index