Lexington Books
Pages: 376
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-7391-0321-0 • Hardback • November 2001 • $140.00 • (£108.00)
978-0-7391-0322-7 • Paperback • November 2001 • $56.99 • (£44.00)
Ananta Kumar Giri is Associate Professor at the Madras Institute of Development Studies. He is the author of Global Transformations: Postmodernity and Beyond (1998).
Chapter 1 Social Criticism, Cultural Creativity, and the Contemporary Dialectics of Transformations
Chapter 2 Moral Commitments and the Transformation of Politics: Kant, Gandhi, and Beyond
Chapter 3 Gandhi, Tagore, and a New Ethics of Argumentation
Chapter 4 Literature and the Tapashya of Transformation
Chapter 5 Socrates and the Pig
Chapter 6 Universities and the Horizons of the Future
Chapter 7 Audited Accountability and the Imperatives of Responsibility: Beyond the Primacy of the Political
Chapter 8 Transcending Disciplinary Boundaries: Creative Experiments and the Critiques of Modernity
Chapter 9 Gender and the Overcoming of Ego
Chapter 10 Exclusion and Integration: The Moral Struggles
Chapter 11 Rethinking the Imperatives of Responsibility: Development Ethics, Aesthetics, and the Challenge of Poverty
Chapter 12 Rethinking Human Well-Being: A Dialogue with Amartya Sen
Chapter 13 Well-Being of Institutions: Problematic Justice and the Challenge of Transformation
Chapter 14 Rethinking Systems as Frames of Coordination: Dialogical Intersubjectivity and the Creativity of Action
Chapter 15 Rethinking Civil Society
Chapter 16 Civil Society and the Limits of Identity Politics
Chapter 17 The Calling of an Ethics of Servanthood
With his far-ranging inquiries and probing insights, Giri belongs to a group of innovative Indian social theorists who offer a welcome counterpoint to ivory-tower academicism. . . .Conversations and Transformations issues a stirring call for contemporary social theory as well as social practice. Although dealing with a multiplicity of distinct issues, the book's chapters coaleasce into a crucial overall theme: the need for personal self-transcendence as well as social and political renewal.
— Fred Dallmayr, University of Notre Dame
These essays show how an Indian thinker creatively responds to problems and challenges from the East as well as the West. They testify to a brilliant mind which is not deterred by the post-modernist onslaught on unity and identity and headlong challenges the glorification of power which many thinkers undertake today. It is a highly inspiring and ennobling work.
— J N. Mohanty, Temple University