Product Overview
From Follett
NOT AVAILABLE FOR SALE IN SOME COUNTRIES.;Title proper from title frame.;Mode of access: World Wide Web.;Cover; Title Page; Copyright Page; Table of Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction: How Not to be Governed; Chapter One: Anarchist Methods and Political Theory; Chapter Two: An Anarchism That is not Anarchism: Notes toward a Critique of Anarchist Imperialism; Chapter Three: Beside the State: Anarchist Strains in Cuban Revolutionary Thought; Chapter Four: Kant via Ranciere: from Ethics to Anarchism; Chapter Five: Nietzsche, Aristocratism, and Non-domination; Chapter Six: Max Stirner, Postanarchy avant la lettre; Chapter Seven: The Late Foucault's Premodernity.;Chapter Eight: The Ambivalent Anarchism of Hannah ArendtChapter Nine: Emma Goldman and the Power of Revolutionary Love; Chapter Ten: ""This is What Democracy Looks Like""; Index; List of Contributors.;Print version record.;Includes bibliographical references and index.;Description based on print version record. How Not to Be Governed explores the contemporary debates and questions concerning anarchism in our own time. The authors address the political failures of earlier practices of anarchism, and the claim that anarchism is impracticable, by examining the anarchisms that have been theorized and practiced in the midst of these supposed failures. The authors revive the possibility of anarchism even as they examine it with a critical lens. Rather than breaking with prior anarchist practices, this volume reveals the central values and tactics of anarchism that remain with us, practiced even in the most.