Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 222
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-1-78661-552-7 • Hardback • January 2021 • $100.00 • (£77.00)
978-1-5381-4993-5 • Paperback • August 2023 • $40.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-78661-553-4 • eBook • January 2021 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
Michael Murphy is recognised as an expert with UNESCO Inclusive Policy Lab and is a member of the Labour Academic Network of leading global scholars supporting the UK Labour Party’s policy work.
Introduction
Part One
1. A Global History of Cosmopolitanism
2. Global Critical Theories
3. Watsuji, Modernity and the Art of Life
Part Two
4. The Emptiness of Cosmopolitanism: How Should a Cosmopolitan Think?
5. Cosmopolitan Transmodernity: Re-imagining the Loci of Enunciation
6. Aidagara and the Grounds of Radical Imagination
Afterword: The Failure of Thought: A Radical Imagination for the Critical Space of Democracy
Written with flair and imagination, Michael Murphy’s exciting and thoughtful book rethinks the relationship of self and other in critical conversation with Gerard Delanty’s cosmopolitanism and Walter Mignolo’s decolonial theory. By pollinating this engaging dialogue with Watsuji Tetsuro’ original concepts and perspectives, the book aspires to shed a new, valuable light on theorizations of temporal and spatial modalities of modernity.
— Marianna Papastephanou, Department of Education, University of Cyprus
This book makes a significant contribution to critical cosmopolitanism. It brings together different traditions of cosmopolitan thought in and opens the field to Japanese philosophy. It is a thoughtful and insightful analysis.
— Gerard Delanty, Professor of Sociology, University of Sussex
Michael Murphy succeeds in an extraordinarily ambitious task: to radically rethink critical cosmopolitan social theory as developed by Gerard Delanty and Walter Mignolo through an application of the central ideas of Watsuji Tetsurō, one of Japan’s most significant modern philosophers and perhaps the world’s first truly global thinker. Highly recommended for scholars and students of contemporary social theory and/or comparative thought.
— James Mark Shields, Professor of Comparative Humanities and Asian Thought, Bucknell University