Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 212
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-78348-286-3 • Hardback • June 2015 • $168.00 • (£131.00)
978-1-78348-287-0 • Paperback • May 2015 • $57.00 • (£44.00)
978-1-78348-288-7 • eBook • May 2015 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Lorna Finlayson is a junior research fellow at King’s College, University of Cambridge.
Introduction / Part I: ‘Normal’ Political Philosophy / 1. There is No Alternative: Constructiveness and Political Criticism / 2. Beware! Beware! The Forest of Sin!: Reluctant Reflections on Rawls / 3. Foul Play: The Norm of Philosophical Charity / Part II: With Radicals Like These… / 4. How to Screw Things with Words: Feminism Unrealised / 5. Nowhere to Run: The Real World in Political Theory / 6. Small and Unsexy: Political Theory in the Real World / Conclusion / Afterword / Bibliography / Index
Finlayson, who has particular interests in theories of ideology, offers a book on the illusion of dissent in contemporary political philosophy, and more particularly in the Anglo-Saxon world. The author looks at political philosophy as a human institution, which at the same time bears traces of the social world it is embedded in and constructs the world readers live in. She claims that contemporary political philosophy deploys methodological norms that covertly maintain the dominance of the liberal framework. In doing that, this discipline becomes political inside and out. This covert methodological trap is revealed through six case studies. Three of them deal with specific concepts from John Rawls that define legitimate dissent out of existence. The remaining cases deal with feminist challenges to the traditional liberal attitude toward pornography, realist critique of liberal normative theory, and an effort among philosophers to engage in self-reflection and to give an account to their place in the world. The author claims that the liberal political philosophy, in its dominant mode, neither helps transform the world for the better nor helps it be understood better. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduate, graduate, and research collections.
— Choice Reviews
[Finlayson’s] dexterity in unmasking the internal contradictions of a discipline which, as she shows, is so loath to acknowledge even the existence of ‘deep dissent’ much less its validity, is […] what is distinctive about this book.
— Contemporary Political Theory
This highly original work offers a novel and exceedingly persuasive approach to contemporary politics, political theory and political philosophy. It is unusual for a book of such great analytic power to be written in a style so easily accessible and engaging; it is at the same time enlightening and a pleasure to read.
— Raymond Geuss, Emeritus Professor, University of Cambridge.
This is a bold and impressively coherent critique of the dominant paradigm in analytical political philosophy. It challenges decisively the claim that Rawls’s criterion of reasonableness can apply to the human world as it is and be acceptable in the way it needs to be to very many of the latter’s inhabitants.
— John Dunn, Fellow of King's College & Emeritus Professor of Political Theory, University of Cambridge
Experimentation with the institutions and practices of philosophy, as [Finlayson] suggests, may encourage greater reflexive awareness of the operations of power within the disciplinary community, and also enable us to address more insightfully the question of what kind of society of philosophers, as well as society more generally, we should aspire to build ... my final sense of this work is that its underlying motivation is perhaps as much philosophical as political, a plea for thoughtfulness against the academic currents of the age.
— New Left Review
[W]ithout fail, the book is intellectually robust, pungently argued, and thought provoking. It succeeds admirably in one of its main self-declared objectives in simply being more fun to read than the vast majority of books in political philosophy.
— European Journal of Philosophy