Inhuman Conditions

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2007-01-31
Publisher(s): Harvard Univ Pr
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Summary

Globalization promises to bring people around the world together, to unite them as members of the human community. To such sanguine expectations, Pheng Cheah responds deftly with a sobering account of how the "inhuman" imperatives of capitalism and technology are transforming our understanding of humanity and its prerogatives. Through an examination of debates about cosmopolitanism and human rights, Inhuman Conditions questions key ideas about what it means to be human that underwrite our understanding of globalization. Cheah asks whether the contemporary international division of labor so irreparably compromises and mars global solidarities and our sense of human belonging that we must radically rethink cherished ideas about humankind as the bearer of dignity and freedom or culture as a power of transcendence. Cheah links influential arguments about the new cosmopolitanism drawn from the humanities, the social sciences, and cultural studies to a perceptive examination of the older cosmopolitanism of Kant and Marx, and juxtaposes them with proliferating formations of collective culture to reveal the flaws in claims about the imminent decline of the nation-state and the obsolescence of popular nationalism. Cheah also proposes a radical rethinking of the normative force of human rights in light of how Asian values challenge human rights universalism.

Author Biography

Pheng Cheah is Professor, Department of Rhetoric, University of California, Berkeley

Table of Contents

Introduction: Globalization and the Inhumanp. 1
Critique of Cosmopolitan Reason
The Cosmopolitical-Todayp. 17
Postnational Lightp. 45
Given Culture: Rethinking Cosmopolitical Freedom in Transnationalismp. 80
Chinese Cosmopolitanism in Two Senses and Postcolonial National Memoryp. 120
Human Rights and the Inhuman
Posit(ion)ing Human Rights in the Current Global Conjuncturep. 145
"Bringing into the Home a Stranger Far More Foreign": Human Rights and the Global Trade in Domestic Laborp. 178
Humanity within the Field of Instrumentalityp. 230
Notesp. 269
Indexp. 315
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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