Critical Humanisms: Humanist/Anti-Humanist Dialogues

Critical Humanisms: Humanist/Anti-Humanist Dialogues

Critical Humanisms: Humanist/Anti-Humanist Dialogues

Critical Humanisms: Humanist/Anti-Humanist Dialogues

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Overview

This distinctive reappraisal of humanism argues that humanist thought is a diverse tradition which cannot be reduced to current conceptions of it. By considering humanism via the categories of Romantic, Existential, Dialogic, Civic, Spiritual, Pagan, Pragmatic and Technological Humanisms, Halliwell and Mousley propose that the critical edge of humanist thought can be rescued from its popular view as intellectually redundant. They also argue that because these humanisms contain within them anti-humanist perspectives, it is possible to counter the charge that humanism is based upon an unquestioned image of human nature. The book focuses on the thought of twenty-four mainly European and North American thinkers, ranging historically from the Renaissance to postmodernism. It discusses foundational writers (some of whom have been claimed as anti-humanists) such as Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, Dewey and Sartre as well as the contemporary thinkers Habermas, Cixous, Rorty, Hall and Haraway, to construct a series of provocative dialogues which suggest the ongoing relevance of humanism to issues of ethics, art, science, selfhood, gender, citizenship and religion. Given the range and originality of the book’s approach, Critical Humanisms will be an invaluable resource for students and researchers in the Humanities, particularly English, American studies, cultural studies, modern languages, philosophy and sociology.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780748615049
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 09/11/2003
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Martin Halliwell is Professor of American Thought and Culture and Head of the School of Arts at the University of Leicester. His authored books include Voices of Mental Health: Medicine, Politics, and American Culture, 1970–2000 (Rutgers UniversityPress, 2017), Therapeutic Revolutions: Medicine, Psychiatry, and American Culture, 1945–1970 (Rutgers UniversityPress, 2013), American Culture in the 1950s (Edinburgh UniversityPress, 2007) and Transatlantic Modernism (Edinburgh UniversityPress, 2005).

Andrew Mousley is Senior Lecturer in English at De Montfort University, Leicester. He is the author of Critical Humanisms (2003, with Martin Halliwell), Renaissance Drama and Contemporary Literary Theory (2000) and the editor of New Casebooks: John Donne (1999). He is the co-editor of the Edinburgh Critical Guides to Literature series.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements; Introduction Towards a Critical Humanism; Chapter 1: Romantic Humanism; (Shakespeare - Marx - Cixous); Chapter 2: Existential Humanism; (Sartre - Arendt - Fanon); Chapter 3: Dialogic Humanism; (Freud - Irigaray - Levinas); Chapter 4: Civic Humanism; (Wollstonecraft - Habermas - Hall); Chapter 5: Spiritual Humanism; (Benjamin - King - Kristeva); Chapter 6: Pagan Humanism; (Bakhtin - Nietzsche - Bataille); Chapter 7: Pragmatic Humanism; (James - Dewey - Rorty); Chapter 8: Technological Humanism; (Foucault - Baudrillard - Haraway); Conclusion: Inhuman, Posthuman, Transhuman, Human; Endnotes; General Bibliography; Index.
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