Speaking Against Number, 9780748619818
Hardcover
Engages with the relation between politics and number through a reading, exegesis and critique of the work of Martin Heidegger.

Speaking Against Number

heidegger, language and the politics of calculation

$307.10

  • Hardcover

    208 pages

  • Release Date

    16 March 2006

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Summary

Numbers and politics are inter-related at almost every level be it the abstract geometry of understandings of territory, the explosion of population statistics and measures of economic standards, the popularity of Utilitarianism, Rawlsian notions of justice, the notion of value, or simply the very idea of political science. Time and space are reduced to co-ordinates, illustrating a very real take on the political: a way of measuring and controlling it.This book engages with the relation …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780748619818
ISBN-10:074861981X
Author:Stuart Elden
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:Edinburgh University Press
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:208
Release Date:16 March 2006
Weight:476g
Dimensions:234mm x 156mm
Series:Taking on the Political
What They're Saying

Critics Review

This volume shows wide-ranging and sound scholarship. Elden has done a superior job of weaving together many important strands of Heidegger’s thought.

Elden should be applauded for writing with such sharp focus, while simultaneously never reducing the genuine complexity of Heidegger’s thought. Contemporary Political Theory Elden is a careful scholar, who writes in a clear, accessible prose. He has identified all the important texts germane to his argument and provides a good rationale to the volume as proposed. – Dr Laurence Hemming, Heythrop College, University of London I wholeheartedly recommend this book with its rich lode of expositions of Heidegger’s texts on the political in its ancient, modern and postmodern manifestations. – Professor Theodore Kisiel, Northern Illinois University Stuart Elden’s Speaking Against Number takes full advantage of the most recent volumes of Heidegger’s previously unpublished lectures and manuscripts to develop a rich new approach to his political thought. The resulting book should be widely read, especially by everyone who thinks they already know all there is to know about this topic. – Professor Robert Bernasconi, University of Memphis This volume shows wide-ranging and sound scholarship. Elden has done a superior job of weaving together many important strands of Heidegger’s thought. – Richard Polt Continental Philosophy Review Elden’s book manages to reinvigorate a seemingly tired debate regarding Heidegger’s political engagement. This is a unique achievement in that he succeeds in re-opening a question that continues to haunt readers of Heidegger: to what extent can we separate the man from his thought? – Paul Ennis, UCD Borderlands e-journal An importantly original contribution to the question of Heidegger and the political. – Babette E. Babich, Fordham University, New York Political Theory Elden should be applauded for writing with such sharp focus, while simultaneously never reducing the genuine complexity of Heidegger’s thought. Elden is a careful scholar, who writes in a clear, accessible prose. He has identified all the important texts germane to his argument and provides a good rationale to the volume as proposed. I wholeheartedly recommend this book with its rich lode of expositions of Heidegger’s texts on the political in its ancient, modern and postmodern manifestations. Stuart Elden’s Speaking Against Number takes full advantage of the most recent volumes of Heidegger’s previously unpublished lectures and manuscripts to develop a rich new approach to his political thought. The resulting book should be widely read, especially by everyone who thinks they already know all there is to know about this topic. This volume shows wide-ranging and sound scholarship. Elden has done a superior job of weaving together many important strands of Heidegger’s thought. Elden’s book manages to reinvigorate a seemingly tired debate regarding Heidegger’s political engagement. This is a unique achievement in that he succeeds in re-opening a question that continues to haunt readers of Heidegger: to what extent can we separate the man from his thought? An importantly original contribution to the question of Heidegger and the political.

About The Author

Stuart Elden

Stuart Elden is Professor of Political Theory and Geography at the University of Warwick

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