Lexington Books
Pages: 328
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7391-0042-4 • Hardback • August 1999 • $152.00 • (£117.00)
978-0-7391-5254-6 • eBook • August 1999 • $144.00 • (£111.00)
Fred Dallmayr is Packey Dee Professor of Political Theory in the Department of Government and International Studies at the University of Notre Dame.
Part 1 Introduction: Toward a Comparative Political Theory
Chapter 2 Mapping Modernities, "Islamic" and "Western"
Chapter 3 Eastern Veiling, Western Freedom?
Chapter 4 Islamic Constitutionalism and the Concept of Democracy
Chapter 5 Rewriting Contemporary Muslim Politics: A Twentieth-Century Periodization
Chapter 6 Symbolic and Utilitarian Value of a Tradition: Martyrdom in the Iranian Political Culture
Chapter 7 Radical Islam and Nonviolence: A Case Study of Religious Empowerment and Constraint
Chapter 8 Indian Secularism and Its Critics: Some Reflections
Chapter 9 Confucianism and Communitarianism in a Liberal Democratic World
Chapter 10 Confucianism with a Liberal Face: Democratic Politics in Postcolonial Taiwan
Chapter 11 Beyond "East and West": Nishida's Universalism and Postcolonial Critique
Chapter 12 Taoist Politics: An Other Way?
Chapter 13 Postmodernity, Eurocentrism, and the Future of Political Philosophy
Dallmayr has done an excellent job of bringing together Western and non-Western scholars who have dared to cross borders and discuss the major questions of political philosophy from a comparative perspective... Dallmayr should be applauded for mapping new terrain and embarking on a most valuable exercise at the start of a new millenium.
— Studies In Contemporary Islam