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Demanding the impossible / Slavoj Žižek ; edited by Yong-june Park.

By: Contributor(s): Publisher: Cambridge, UK : Polity Press, 2013Description: vii, 144 pages ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780745672281
  • 9780745672298
Subject(s):
Contents:
1. Politics and responsibility -- 2. Obsession for harmony/Compulsion to identify -- 3. Politicization of ethics -- 4. Means without end: political phronesis -- 5. "May you live in interesting times" -- 6. Communism: the ethico-political fiasco -- 7. Who is afraid of another failed revolution? -- 8. Another world is possible -- 9. For they know not what they do -- 10. Parallax view on postmodern globalization -- 11. The public use of scandal -- 12. The screen of politeness/Empty gestures and performatives -- 13. Deadlock of totalitarian communism -- 14. The subversive use of theory -- 15. Embodying a proletarian position -- 16. New forms of apartheid -- 17. Intrusion of the excluded into the socio-political space -- 18. Rage capital and risk-taking revolutionary changes -- 19. Café revolution -- 20. To begin from the beginning -- 21. The fear of real love -- 22. Dialectic of liberal superiority -- 23. The day after -- 24. The universality of political miracles -- 25. Messianism, multitude, and wishful thinking -- 26. Politicization of favelas -- 27. Bolivarianism, the populist temptation -- 28. Violent civil disobedience -- 29. Legitimacy of symbolic violence -- 30. Gandhi, Aristide, and divine violence -- 31. No moralization but egotism -- 32. Possibility of concrete universality -- 33. Common struggle for freedom -- 34. The impossible happens.
Summary: Based on live interviews, this book captures Žižek at his best, elucidating such topics as the uprisings of the Arab Spring, the global financial crisis, populism in Latin America, the rise of China, and even the riddle of North Korea. While analyzing our present predicaments, Žižek also explores possibilities for change. A key obligation in our troubled times, Žižek argues, is to dare to ask fundamental questions: we must reflect and theorize anew, and always be prepared to rethink and redefine the limits of the possible.
Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Barcode
Book Book CGLAS Library Purple 320.01 ZIZ (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 09046

1. Politics and responsibility -- 2. Obsession for harmony/Compulsion to identify -- 3. Politicization of ethics -- 4. Means without end: political phronesis -- 5. "May you live in interesting times" -- 6. Communism: the ethico-political fiasco -- 7. Who is afraid of another failed revolution? -- 8. Another world is possible -- 9. For they know not what they do -- 10. Parallax view on postmodern globalization -- 11. The public use of scandal -- 12. The screen of politeness/Empty gestures and performatives -- 13. Deadlock of totalitarian communism -- 14. The subversive use of theory -- 15. Embodying a proletarian position -- 16. New forms of apartheid -- 17. Intrusion of the excluded into the socio-political space -- 18. Rage capital and risk-taking revolutionary changes -- 19. Café revolution -- 20. To begin from the beginning -- 21. The fear of real love -- 22. Dialectic of liberal superiority -- 23. The day after -- 24. The universality of political miracles -- 25. Messianism, multitude, and wishful thinking -- 26. Politicization of favelas -- 27. Bolivarianism, the populist temptation -- 28. Violent civil disobedience -- 29. Legitimacy of symbolic violence -- 30. Gandhi, Aristide, and divine violence -- 31. No moralization but egotism -- 32. Possibility of concrete universality -- 33. Common struggle for freedom -- 34. The impossible happens.

Based on live interviews, this book captures Žižek at his best, elucidating such topics as the uprisings of the Arab Spring, the global financial crisis, populism in Latin America, the rise of China, and even the riddle of North Korea. While analyzing our present predicaments, Žižek also explores possibilities for change. A key obligation in our troubled times, Žižek argues, is to dare to ask fundamental questions: we must reflect and theorize anew, and always be prepared to rethink and redefine the limits of the possible.