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Globalization, Critique and Social Theory

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In recent years, under the impression and the burden of globalization and neoliberalism, debates about the relationship between the theory and practice of progress - including the theory and practi...
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  • 16 November 2015
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In recent years, under the impression and the burden of globalization and neoliberalism, debates about the relationship between the theory and practice of progress - including the theory and practice of social critique - have gone through an unexpected and momentous revival, renewal and rejuvenation. This is due in large part to the proliferation of manifest crises in the early years of the twenty-first century. The terrorist attacks in September of 2001, the financial crisis of 2008 that spawned the Great Recession, the Euro crisis that began in fall 2010 - these events provided glimpses of the existing system of political economy, and opportunities to begin to grasp and reveal the ongoing reconstruction of business-labor-government relations in the early 21st century. Yet, in a variety of ways, the notions that theories and practices of rigorous social critique in and of modern societies could become outdated, or that they were based on a categorical misunderstanding of the nature of social, economic, political and cultural life in the modern world, were symptomatic of an ongoing reconfiguration of the system of political economy itself.
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Price: $183.99
Pages: 320
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Imprint: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Series: Current Perspectives in Social Theory
Publication Date: 16 November 2015
ISBN: 9781785602474
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Social theory, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Globalization
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The Task of Critical Theory Today: Rethinking the Critique of Capitalism and its Futures. Profit Maxims: Capitalism and the Common Sense of Time and Money. The Neo-Idealist Paradigm Shift in Contemporary Critical Theory. Theorizing Modern Society as an Inverted Reality: How Critical Theory and Indigenous Critiques of Globalization Must Learn From Each Other. Toward a Critical Ontology of the Social: Hegel, Lukács, and the Challenge of Mediation. Critical Theory and Practice: Bridging the Global and the Personal. A Lecture. Call for a New Social Theory: Re-Igniting Radical Imagination. Imperial Homunculi: The Speculative Singularities of American Hegemony (Drones, Suicide Bombers, and Rampage Killers, or, an Excursion into Durkheimian Geometry). How Legends Become Brands: The Culture Industry in the Second Enclosure Movement. Thick Description, Nomological Laws and Ideal Types: Which Methodology Helps Most with Praxis?. About the Authors. Copyright page. Dedication. EDITORIAL BOARD. Globalization, Critique and Social Theory: Diagnoses and Challenges. Introduction. List of Contributors. Current Perspectives in Social Theory. Globalization, Critique and Social Theory: Diagnoses and Challenges.