Reviewing Political Criticism: Journals, Intellectuals, and the State
Reviewing Political Criticism examines the rise of the ’review’ form of journal publication, from the early eighteenth to the early twenty-first centuries. The review belongs to a long tradition of written political criticism that first advised, then revised, and with the increased confidence afforded to civil society by the rise of market capitalism, subsequently challenged and even transformed the state’s view on what and how it governed. Chaves investigates the crucial nexus of intellectual debate with political judgment over this time, and highlights the review’s central role in upholding this connection. Focusing upon critical moments that required the exercise of political judgment, the book explains this journal form as a means of political practice, one that essentially ’re-views’ the state’s view of how society should be ordered. To understand critical activity, one must reflect on where this activity takes place-on the institutions of criticism that sustain it. Referred to by some as the ’natural habitat’ of intellectuals, journals, as the institutionalized sites of theoretical discourse, are often overlooked. This groundbreaking book offers a concentrated critique of the review form of journal publication as a medium for political thought and action, as a decisive site for political judgment by the state’s conservers and critics.
"1120698399"
Reviewing Political Criticism: Journals, Intellectuals, and the State
Reviewing Political Criticism examines the rise of the ’review’ form of journal publication, from the early eighteenth to the early twenty-first centuries. The review belongs to a long tradition of written political criticism that first advised, then revised, and with the increased confidence afforded to civil society by the rise of market capitalism, subsequently challenged and even transformed the state’s view on what and how it governed. Chaves investigates the crucial nexus of intellectual debate with political judgment over this time, and highlights the review’s central role in upholding this connection. Focusing upon critical moments that required the exercise of political judgment, the book explains this journal form as a means of political practice, one that essentially ’re-views’ the state’s view of how society should be ordered. To understand critical activity, one must reflect on where this activity takes place-on the institutions of criticism that sustain it. Referred to by some as the ’natural habitat’ of intellectuals, journals, as the institutionalized sites of theoretical discourse, are often overlooked. This groundbreaking book offers a concentrated critique of the review form of journal publication as a medium for political thought and action, as a decisive site for political judgment by the state’s conservers and critics.
54.99 In Stock
Reviewing Political Criticism: Journals, Intellectuals, and the State

Reviewing Political Criticism: Journals, Intellectuals, and the State

by Elisabeth K. Chaves
Reviewing Political Criticism: Journals, Intellectuals, and the State
Reviewing Political Criticism: Journals, Intellectuals, and the State

Reviewing Political Criticism: Journals, Intellectuals, and the State

by Elisabeth K. Chaves

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Overview

Reviewing Political Criticism examines the rise of the ’review’ form of journal publication, from the early eighteenth to the early twenty-first centuries. The review belongs to a long tradition of written political criticism that first advised, then revised, and with the increased confidence afforded to civil society by the rise of market capitalism, subsequently challenged and even transformed the state’s view on what and how it governed. Chaves investigates the crucial nexus of intellectual debate with political judgment over this time, and highlights the review’s central role in upholding this connection. Focusing upon critical moments that required the exercise of political judgment, the book explains this journal form as a means of political practice, one that essentially ’re-views’ the state’s view of how society should be ordered. To understand critical activity, one must reflect on where this activity takes place-on the institutions of criticism that sustain it. Referred to by some as the ’natural habitat’ of intellectuals, journals, as the institutionalized sites of theoretical discourse, are often overlooked. This groundbreaking book offers a concentrated critique of the review form of journal publication as a medium for political thought and action, as a decisive site for political judgment by the state’s conservers and critics.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780367599751
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 06/30/2020
Series: Public Intellectuals and the Sociology of Knowledge
Pages: 188
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Elisabeth K. Chaves is a Visiting Assistant Professor in the School of Public and International Affairs at Virginia Tech, USA.

Table of Contents

List of Tables vii

Preface ix

Acknowledgments xiii

Introduction: The View and the Re-view 1

1 The Beginnings of the Re-view 11

2 The "Great Re-views": The Institutionalization of Critical Practice 31

3 The Re-view of War, Intellectuals, and the State 55

4 The Public Interest, Telos, and the Re-view of Welfare State Politics 75

5 The Professionalization of Re-view? The New "Critical" Journals 105

6 The Present Disconnect Between View and Re-view 131

Conclusions: The Future of Re-view? 155

Bibliography 157

Index 171

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