Haderer, M. (2022). Does emancipation devour its children? Beyond a stalled dialectic of emancipation. European Journal of Social Theory, 25(1), 172–188. https://doi.org/10.1177/13684310211028382
Critical social theory; Foucault; emancipation; judgement; late modernity
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Abstract:
Emancipation serves not only as a midwife for progressive agendas such as greater equality and sustainability but also as their gravedigger. This diagnosis underpins Ingolfur Blühdorn's 'dialectic of emancipation', which depicts a dilemma but offers no perspective on how to deal with it. By drawing on Foucault, this article suggests conceiving of emancipation as a task moderns are confronted with even if a given emancipatory project has come to devour its children. Claiming autonomy from given social constellations is key to this task; key also is judging between legitimate and illegitimate claims to autonomy. In late modernity, the criteria for such judgement are no longer universally given. Instead of regarding the latter as entry into mere subjectivism (Blühdorn), this article presents judgement as a key political, 'world building'-activity (Arendt), a critical social theory may join in, by not only observing the world but by also taking sides in it.
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Project (external):
Austrian Science Fund (FWF)
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Project ID:
P31226
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Additional information:
Part of Special Issue "The Dialectic of Emancipation – Transgressing Boundaries and the Boundaries of Transgression"