Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 168
Trim: 6 x 9
979-8-8818-0372-8 • Hardback • December 2024 • $95.00 • (£73.00)
979-8-8818-0374-2 • eBook • December 2024 • $45.00 • (£35.00) (coming soon)
J. Moufawad-Paul is professor of philosophy at York University and is the author of Continuity and Rupture, The Communist Necessity, Politics in Command, and other books.
Foreword, D.Z. Shaw
Prologue
Chapter 1: The Meaning of Subject
Chapter 2: Subject and Ideology
Chapter 3: Subject and Being
Chapter 4: Subject as Assemblage, Partisan, Collective
Epilogue: The Subjective Factor
Acknowledgments
Index
About the Author
A brilliantly provocative insurgent philosophical intervention! Being Subjects: Preliminary Materials of the Person is an incredibly comprehensive deep dive into the question of human subjectivity. J. Moufawad-Paul challenges the reader with a refreshingly rigorous philosophical interrogation of the Subject driven by an emancipatory imperative towards ongoing class struggle unapologetically mediated by Black liberation discourse, anticolonial thought and critical theory. Unlike many contemporary thinkers who claim to represent the Radical imagination only to get lost in the liberal labyrinth of the normative gaze of established power, Moufawad-Paul meticulously follows through on several threads of modern philosophy that implicate our understanding of the Subject in relation to a radical politics of confrontation with the Minotaur of Empire.
— A. Shahid Stover, author of Being and Insurrection and Epistemic Ruptures, Insurgent Philosophy
Being Subjects clears ground for thinking a revolutionary subject by tracking modern subjectivity through its ideological entanglements and interrogating the reactionary thesis of the exhaustion of subject-as-freedom. Moufawad-Paul is a gadfly of and for the Left, essential reading for the way forward!
— Matthew McLennan, Saint Paul University
Being Subjects is a project of irruption and implosion—a simultaneity of proliferation and collapse that takes place at the presumed foundations of epistemology and archive. Moufawad-Paul is explicating while disarticulating a concept—“the subject”—that is arguably unparalleled as a taken for granted lexicon of humanist canon and, in fact, of “(human) being” itself. This book radically destabilizes academic and activist loyalties to critical, Marxist, poststructuralist, and postcolonialist iterations of political theory that rest on the assumptive coherence of history’s hegemonic actors and insurgent agents alike. Herein is a scattering that refuses the promise of reassembly, because the creativity of being—human and otherwise—defies discipline and capture.
— Dylan Rodríguez, author of White Reconstruction: Domestic Warfar and the Logics of Genocide, and Distinguished Professor at the University of California