In "From Redistribution to Recognition?" Nancy Fraser formulates a theory aiming at defending only those versions of identity politics that can be coherently combined with socialist politics. Many commentators have criticized the analytical distinction between economic and cultural injustice underpinning this theory. I argue, however, that it is Fraser's inability to uphold this distinction that makes her argument problematic, and that a clearer analytical distinction between the categories class and identity makes possible both a more theoretically satisfying critique of the "postsocialist" condition and the formulation of a radical politics that addresses economic as well as cultural injustices
The concept of recognition, and its relationship to the way we theorise identity and justice, has em...
In this paper, we seek to revisit the debate between Honneth and Fraser about the concepts of recogn...
This paper interrogates the status of race as a valid social problematic in critical social thought,...
In "From Redistribution to Recognition?" Nancy Fraser formulates a theory aiming at defending only t...
In “From Redistribution to Recognition?” Nancy Fraser formulates a theory aiming at defending only t...
http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/2175-7984.2017v16n35p242 The politics of identity and the idea of recogni...
This paper examines Nancy Fraser's attempt to repair the apparent schism between economic and cultur...
The philosopher Nancy Fraser defines two paradigms for social justice: the economic and the cultural...
What does social justice require in contemporary societies? What are the requirements of social demo...
In the course of the last 30 years, feminist theories of gender have shifted from quasi-Marxist, lab...
Charles Taylor (1994) and Nancy Fraser (1995) document the move in the 1990s away from a class polit...
ANYONE WHO has been following developments in political philos-ophy over the last few years could no...
In the course of the last 30 years, feminist theories of gender have shifted from quasi-Marxist, lab...
From an approach to questions and theories of identity and recognition and through authors that have...
The bifurcation between economically and culturally orientated perspectives has become a central tro...
The concept of recognition, and its relationship to the way we theorise identity and justice, has em...
In this paper, we seek to revisit the debate between Honneth and Fraser about the concepts of recogn...
This paper interrogates the status of race as a valid social problematic in critical social thought,...
In "From Redistribution to Recognition?" Nancy Fraser formulates a theory aiming at defending only t...
In “From Redistribution to Recognition?” Nancy Fraser formulates a theory aiming at defending only t...
http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/2175-7984.2017v16n35p242 The politics of identity and the idea of recogni...
This paper examines Nancy Fraser's attempt to repair the apparent schism between economic and cultur...
The philosopher Nancy Fraser defines two paradigms for social justice: the economic and the cultural...
What does social justice require in contemporary societies? What are the requirements of social demo...
In the course of the last 30 years, feminist theories of gender have shifted from quasi-Marxist, lab...
Charles Taylor (1994) and Nancy Fraser (1995) document the move in the 1990s away from a class polit...
ANYONE WHO has been following developments in political philos-ophy over the last few years could no...
In the course of the last 30 years, feminist theories of gender have shifted from quasi-Marxist, lab...
From an approach to questions and theories of identity and recognition and through authors that have...
The bifurcation between economically and culturally orientated perspectives has become a central tro...
The concept of recognition, and its relationship to the way we theorise identity and justice, has em...
In this paper, we seek to revisit the debate between Honneth and Fraser about the concepts of recogn...
This paper interrogates the status of race as a valid social problematic in critical social thought,...