Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 232
Trim: 6 x 9¼
978-0-8476-9061-9 • Hardback • June 2000 • $155.00 • (£119.00)
978-0-8476-9062-6 • Paperback • June 2000 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
John Pettegrew is assistant professor of history at Lehigh University. He is currently completing a book entitled Brutes in Suits: The Pathological Origins of American Masculinity, 1890-1920.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Pragmatism: An Old Name for Some New Ways of Thinking?
Chapter 3 Rorty, Radicalism, and Romanticism: The Politics of Gaze
Chapter 4 Private Life and Public Commitment: From Walter Rauschenbusch to Richard Rorty
Chapter 5 Lives of Irony: Randolph Bourne, Richard Rorty, and a New Genealogy of Critical Pragmatism
Chapter 6 Is It Pragmatism? Rorty and the American Tradition
Chapter 7 Is the Revival of Pragmatism Practical?
Chapter 8 Narrative Politics: Richard Rorty at the "End of Reform"
Chapter 9 Afterword: Intellectual Historians and Pragmatist Philosophy
This superb collection of critical essays illuminates the intellectual journey of Richard Rorty, one of the most interesting, elusive, and unpredictable philosophers of the late twentieth century. From antifoundationalist neopragmatist to socially engaged public intellectual, Rorty has challenged and sometimes baffled his admirers and detractors alike. These essays, nicely introduced and contextualized by editor John Pettegrew, offer invaluable insights to all those interested in Rorty's evolution, the history of pragmatism, the larger contours of twentieth-century intellectual history, and the public discourse of our day.
— Paul Boyer, Institute for Research in the Humanities, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Discerning essays that clarify Rorty's place in American intellectual history and explain Rorty's special appeal to theoretically-engaged historians.....
— David A. Hollinger, University of California at Berkeley
Insightfully introduced and contexualized by editor John Pettegrew, these well-written and probing pieces map the trajectory of Rorty's philosophical odyssey against the backdrop of America's and pragmatism's historical development.
— Choice Reviews
These essays succeed in illustrating the analytic fertility of intellectual history in relation to this influential and controversial thinker whose significance is hard to capture either through philosophical or political analysis alone.
— Political Studies Review
The excellent essays in this volume, some previously published, engage with Rorty but invariably find him lacking.
— Journal of American History
The essays in this volume make it all the more apparent why Richard Rorty has become a lightening rod in contemporary American culture, and why intellectual historians have been among his sternest critics. Rorty's bracing response to them is also further evidence that he can stand out in a storm.
— Robert Westbrook, professor of history, University of Rochester; author of John Dewey and American Democracy
Discerning essays that clarify Rorty's place in American intellectual history and explain Rorty's special appeal to theoretically-engaged historians.
— David A. Hollinger, University of California at Berkeley