Dancing with Iris
The Philosophy of Iris Marion Young
Herausgeber: Ferguson, Ann; Nagel, Mechtild
Dancing with Iris
The Philosophy of Iris Marion Young
Herausgeber: Ferguson, Ann; Nagel, Mechtild
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Dancing with Iris engages with Iris Marion Young's prolific writings in political theory and in phenomenology. Contributors discuss her work from a variety of disciplines, including philosophy, political science, human rights law, cultural geography and dance studies
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Dancing with Iris engages with Iris Marion Young's prolific writings in political theory and in phenomenology. Contributors discuss her work from a variety of disciplines, including philosophy, political science, human rights law, cultural geography and dance studies
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Oktober 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9780195389128
- ISBN-10: 0195389123
- Artikelnr.: 26865722
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 280
- Erscheinungstermin: 8. Oktober 2009
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 18mm
- Gewicht: 567g
- ISBN-13: 9780195389128
- ISBN-10: 0195389123
- Artikelnr.: 26865722
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Ann Ferguson is Emerita Professor of Women's Studies and Philosophy at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. Mechthild Nagel is Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Center for Gender and Intercultural Studies at the State University of New York, College at Cortland.
* I. Homage to Iris Marion Young
* 1: Ann Ferguson, (University of: Introduction
* Massachusetts, Amherst) and Mechthild Nagel, (State University of New
York, College at Cortland)
* 2: Vlasta Jalusic, (Ljubljana University) and Mojca Pajnik,
(Ljubljana University): When I think about myself as politically
engaged, I think of myself as a citizen: Interview with Irish Young
* 3: Karsten J. Struhl, (John Jay College of Criminal Justice: Letter
to Iris Young
* II. Embodiment, Phenomenology and Gender
* 4: Sandra Bartky, (University of Illionis at Chicago): Iris Young and
the Gendering of Phenomenology
* 5: Michaele Ferguson, (University of Colorado at Boulder): Resonance
and Dissonance: The Role of Personal Experience in Iris Marion
Young's Feminist Phenomenology
* 6: Susan Leigh Foster, (UCLA): Throwing Like a Girl, Dancing Like a
Feminist Philosopher
* 7: Bonnie Mann, (University of Oregon): Iris Marion Young: Between
Phenomenology and Structural Injustice
* III. Theorizing the State: Method, Violence and Resistance
* 8: Alison M. Jaggar, (University of Colorado at Boulder):
LImagination au pouvoir: Comparing John Rawlss Method of Ideal Theory
with Iris Marion Youngs Method of Critical Theory
* 9: Bat-Ami Bar On, (Binghamton University): Thinking Between
Democracy and Violence
* 10: Margaret Denike, (Carleton Univeristy): Engendering [In]Security
and Terror: On the Protection Racket of Security States
* IV. Justice: Ethics and Responsibility
* 11: Martha Nussbaum, (University of Chicago): Iris Young's Last
Thoughts on Responsibility for Global Justice
* 12: Claudia Card, (University of Wisconsin): Injustice, Evil, and
Oppression
* 13: Lori Gruen, (Wesleyan University): The Faces of Animal Oppression
* 14: Desirée Melton, (College of Notre Dame of Maryland): Making
Character Disposition Matter in Young's Deliberative Democracy
* V. Justice: Democracy and Inclusion
* 15: Ann Ferguson, (University of Massachusetts, Amherst): Iris Young,
Global Responsibility and Solidarity
* 16: Carol C. Gould, (Temple University): Varieties of Global
Responsibility: Social Connection, Human Rights, and Transnational
Solidarity
* 17: Máriam Martinez, (Autonomous University of Madrid): On
Immigration Politics in the Context of European Societies and the
Structural Inequality Model
* 18: Ibipo Johnston-Anumonwo, (State University of New York, College
at Cortland): Womens Work Trips and Multifaceted Oppression
* Young Bibliography
* General Bibliography
* Index
* 1: Ann Ferguson, (University of: Introduction
* Massachusetts, Amherst) and Mechthild Nagel, (State University of New
York, College at Cortland)
* 2: Vlasta Jalusic, (Ljubljana University) and Mojca Pajnik,
(Ljubljana University): When I think about myself as politically
engaged, I think of myself as a citizen: Interview with Irish Young
* 3: Karsten J. Struhl, (John Jay College of Criminal Justice: Letter
to Iris Young
* II. Embodiment, Phenomenology and Gender
* 4: Sandra Bartky, (University of Illionis at Chicago): Iris Young and
the Gendering of Phenomenology
* 5: Michaele Ferguson, (University of Colorado at Boulder): Resonance
and Dissonance: The Role of Personal Experience in Iris Marion
Young's Feminist Phenomenology
* 6: Susan Leigh Foster, (UCLA): Throwing Like a Girl, Dancing Like a
Feminist Philosopher
* 7: Bonnie Mann, (University of Oregon): Iris Marion Young: Between
Phenomenology and Structural Injustice
* III. Theorizing the State: Method, Violence and Resistance
* 8: Alison M. Jaggar, (University of Colorado at Boulder):
LImagination au pouvoir: Comparing John Rawlss Method of Ideal Theory
with Iris Marion Youngs Method of Critical Theory
* 9: Bat-Ami Bar On, (Binghamton University): Thinking Between
Democracy and Violence
* 10: Margaret Denike, (Carleton Univeristy): Engendering [In]Security
and Terror: On the Protection Racket of Security States
* IV. Justice: Ethics and Responsibility
* 11: Martha Nussbaum, (University of Chicago): Iris Young's Last
Thoughts on Responsibility for Global Justice
* 12: Claudia Card, (University of Wisconsin): Injustice, Evil, and
Oppression
* 13: Lori Gruen, (Wesleyan University): The Faces of Animal Oppression
* 14: Desirée Melton, (College of Notre Dame of Maryland): Making
Character Disposition Matter in Young's Deliberative Democracy
* V. Justice: Democracy and Inclusion
* 15: Ann Ferguson, (University of Massachusetts, Amherst): Iris Young,
Global Responsibility and Solidarity
* 16: Carol C. Gould, (Temple University): Varieties of Global
Responsibility: Social Connection, Human Rights, and Transnational
Solidarity
* 17: Máriam Martinez, (Autonomous University of Madrid): On
Immigration Politics in the Context of European Societies and the
Structural Inequality Model
* 18: Ibipo Johnston-Anumonwo, (State University of New York, College
at Cortland): Womens Work Trips and Multifaceted Oppression
* Young Bibliography
* General Bibliography
* Index
* I. Homage to Iris Marion Young
* 1: Ann Ferguson, (University of: Introduction
* Massachusetts, Amherst) and Mechthild Nagel, (State University of New
York, College at Cortland)
* 2: Vlasta Jalusic, (Ljubljana University) and Mojca Pajnik,
(Ljubljana University): When I think about myself as politically
engaged, I think of myself as a citizen: Interview with Irish Young
* 3: Karsten J. Struhl, (John Jay College of Criminal Justice: Letter
to Iris Young
* II. Embodiment, Phenomenology and Gender
* 4: Sandra Bartky, (University of Illionis at Chicago): Iris Young and
the Gendering of Phenomenology
* 5: Michaele Ferguson, (University of Colorado at Boulder): Resonance
and Dissonance: The Role of Personal Experience in Iris Marion
Young's Feminist Phenomenology
* 6: Susan Leigh Foster, (UCLA): Throwing Like a Girl, Dancing Like a
Feminist Philosopher
* 7: Bonnie Mann, (University of Oregon): Iris Marion Young: Between
Phenomenology and Structural Injustice
* III. Theorizing the State: Method, Violence and Resistance
* 8: Alison M. Jaggar, (University of Colorado at Boulder):
LImagination au pouvoir: Comparing John Rawlss Method of Ideal Theory
with Iris Marion Youngs Method of Critical Theory
* 9: Bat-Ami Bar On, (Binghamton University): Thinking Between
Democracy and Violence
* 10: Margaret Denike, (Carleton Univeristy): Engendering [In]Security
and Terror: On the Protection Racket of Security States
* IV. Justice: Ethics and Responsibility
* 11: Martha Nussbaum, (University of Chicago): Iris Young's Last
Thoughts on Responsibility for Global Justice
* 12: Claudia Card, (University of Wisconsin): Injustice, Evil, and
Oppression
* 13: Lori Gruen, (Wesleyan University): The Faces of Animal Oppression
* 14: Desirée Melton, (College of Notre Dame of Maryland): Making
Character Disposition Matter in Young's Deliberative Democracy
* V. Justice: Democracy and Inclusion
* 15: Ann Ferguson, (University of Massachusetts, Amherst): Iris Young,
Global Responsibility and Solidarity
* 16: Carol C. Gould, (Temple University): Varieties of Global
Responsibility: Social Connection, Human Rights, and Transnational
Solidarity
* 17: Máriam Martinez, (Autonomous University of Madrid): On
Immigration Politics in the Context of European Societies and the
Structural Inequality Model
* 18: Ibipo Johnston-Anumonwo, (State University of New York, College
at Cortland): Womens Work Trips and Multifaceted Oppression
* Young Bibliography
* General Bibliography
* Index
* 1: Ann Ferguson, (University of: Introduction
* Massachusetts, Amherst) and Mechthild Nagel, (State University of New
York, College at Cortland)
* 2: Vlasta Jalusic, (Ljubljana University) and Mojca Pajnik,
(Ljubljana University): When I think about myself as politically
engaged, I think of myself as a citizen: Interview with Irish Young
* 3: Karsten J. Struhl, (John Jay College of Criminal Justice: Letter
to Iris Young
* II. Embodiment, Phenomenology and Gender
* 4: Sandra Bartky, (University of Illionis at Chicago): Iris Young and
the Gendering of Phenomenology
* 5: Michaele Ferguson, (University of Colorado at Boulder): Resonance
and Dissonance: The Role of Personal Experience in Iris Marion
Young's Feminist Phenomenology
* 6: Susan Leigh Foster, (UCLA): Throwing Like a Girl, Dancing Like a
Feminist Philosopher
* 7: Bonnie Mann, (University of Oregon): Iris Marion Young: Between
Phenomenology and Structural Injustice
* III. Theorizing the State: Method, Violence and Resistance
* 8: Alison M. Jaggar, (University of Colorado at Boulder):
LImagination au pouvoir: Comparing John Rawlss Method of Ideal Theory
with Iris Marion Youngs Method of Critical Theory
* 9: Bat-Ami Bar On, (Binghamton University): Thinking Between
Democracy and Violence
* 10: Margaret Denike, (Carleton Univeristy): Engendering [In]Security
and Terror: On the Protection Racket of Security States
* IV. Justice: Ethics and Responsibility
* 11: Martha Nussbaum, (University of Chicago): Iris Young's Last
Thoughts on Responsibility for Global Justice
* 12: Claudia Card, (University of Wisconsin): Injustice, Evil, and
Oppression
* 13: Lori Gruen, (Wesleyan University): The Faces of Animal Oppression
* 14: Desirée Melton, (College of Notre Dame of Maryland): Making
Character Disposition Matter in Young's Deliberative Democracy
* V. Justice: Democracy and Inclusion
* 15: Ann Ferguson, (University of Massachusetts, Amherst): Iris Young,
Global Responsibility and Solidarity
* 16: Carol C. Gould, (Temple University): Varieties of Global
Responsibility: Social Connection, Human Rights, and Transnational
Solidarity
* 17: Máriam Martinez, (Autonomous University of Madrid): On
Immigration Politics in the Context of European Societies and the
Structural Inequality Model
* 18: Ibipo Johnston-Anumonwo, (State University of New York, College
at Cortland): Womens Work Trips and Multifaceted Oppression
* Young Bibliography
* General Bibliography
* Index