Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 228
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-78348-795-0 • Hardback • August 2017 • $154.00 • (£119.00)
978-1-78348-887-2 • Paperback • March 2019 • $51.00 • (£39.00)
978-1-78348-796-7 • eBook • August 2017 • $48.50 • (£37.00)
Anjana Raghavan is Senior Lecturer in Sociology, Sheffield Hallam University, United Kingdom.
Introduction: Incanting the body into the Political / 1. Locating Corporeal Cosmopolitanism: Theoretical Vicissitudes / 2. The Anatomy of Abjection: Understanding Exclusion, Corporeality, and Emotions
/ 3. Occluded Rainbows: Queerness and Cosmopolitan Solidarity in India / 4. Are Dispossessed Bodies Human? Gender, Exile, and Cosmopolitan Solidarity / 5. Love in the Time of Corporeal Cosmopolitanism
/ 6. Conclusion: Incanting the Political into the Body / Index
Visiting the stories and story-telling traditions beginning with queer and cosmopolitan solidarities in India (specifically from Tamil Nadu) and working through a number of important texts of Indo-Caribbean women's literature, Raghavan invites us to begin to think deeply about what a decolonial, feminist, and corporeal cosmopolitanism looks, sounds, and feels like. . . . As a remedy to the overly legal and depoliticized theories of liberal cosmopolitanism, and mostly to ideal-theory variations at that, this book puts forth various models of refreshingly embodied, feminist, decolonial cosmopolitanisms in the plural that are capacious enough to be both descriptive and normative at times. I recommend this book to anyone who is looking for ways to have a genuine conversation about cosmopolitanism in the decolonial and feminist key.
— Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy
Fleshy and affective, Towards Corporeal Cosmopolitanism offers a radical alternative to the disembodied rationalism of liberal cosmopolitanism. Using an approach that is at once decolonial, queer and feminist, Raghavan explores cosmopolitan solidarity in "the global south." It is a key contribution to opening the heart of cosmopolitanism to the corporealised knowledges of those who are violently marginalised and excluded. — Veronique Pin-Fat, Senior Lecturer in International Relations, The University of Manchester
Anjana Raghavan offers an invigorating intervention into contemporary discourses on cosmopolitanism. Moving effortlessly through nuanced critiques of Euro-American philosophy, her efforts re-center embodiment, affect, and emotion as crucial sites of postcolonial epistemology. Corporeal Cosmopolitanism is a compelling and sensuously rendered treatise on decolonial knowledge and radical world-making. — Pavithra Prasad