ABSTRACT

The triangular relationship between the social, the political, and the cultural has opened up social and political theory to new challenges. The social can no longer be reduced to the category of society, and the political extends beyond the traditional concerns of the nature of the state and political authority.

This Handbook will address a range of issues that have recently emerged from the disciplines of social and political theory, focusing on key themes as opposed to schools of thought or major theorists. It is divided into three sections which address:

  • the most influential theoretical traditions that have emerged from the legacy of the twentieth century
  • the most important new and emerging frameworks of analysis today
  • the major theoretical problems in recent social and political theory

The Second edition is an enlarged, revised, and updated version of the first edition, which was published in 2011 and comprised 42 chapters. The new edition consists of 50 chapters, of which seventeen are entirely new chapters covering topics that have become increasingly prominent in social and political theory in recent years, such as populism, the new materialism, postcolonialism, Deleuzean theory, post-humanism, post-capitalism as well as older topics that were not covered in the first edition, such as Arendt, the gift, critical realism, anarchism. All chapters retained from the first edition have been thoroughly revised and updated.

The Routledge International Handbook of Contemporary Social and Political Theory encompasses the most up-to-date developments in contemporary social and political theory, and as such is an essential research tool for both undergraduate and postgraduate students as well as researchers working in the fields of political theory, social and political philosophy, contemporary social theory, and cultural theory.

chapter |34 pages

Introduction: social, political, and cultural theory since the sixties

The demise of classical Marxism and liberalism, the new reality of the welfare state, resistance, and the loss of epistemic innocence

part I|184 pages

Living traditions

chapter 2|11 pages

Pierre Bourdieu and his legacy

chapter 3|11 pages

Lacanian theory

Ideology, enjoyment and the spirits of capitalism

chapter 4|13 pages

The Marxist legacy

chapter 5|11 pages

Critical race theory

chapter 7|11 pages

Accidental conditions

The social consequences of poststructuralist philosophy

chapter 8|12 pages

Critical theory today

Legacies and new directions

chapter 12|10 pages

Republicanism

Non-domination and the free state

chapter 15|12 pages

Intellectuals and society

Sociological and historical perspectives

part II|188 pages

New and emerging frameworks

chapter 22017|11 pages

Anarchist social and political theory

chapter 19|9 pages

Critical realism

chapter 20|10 pages

Power, legitimacy, and authority

chapter 21|9 pages

Environment and risk

chapter 22|11 pages

Modernity in social and political theory

Correcting misunderstandings 1

chapter 23|14 pages

Social and political trust

chapter 25|11 pages

Nationalism and social theory

The distinction between community and society

chapter 26|11 pages

Empire and imperialism

chapter 27|11 pages

Cosmopolitanism

Roots and diversities

chapter 28|11 pages

From friction to fruition

Social theory meets postcolonial studies

chapter 29|14 pages

Nature and society

part III|186 pages

New problems

chapter 40834|12 pages

Sovereignty, security and the exception

chapter 35|11 pages

The future of the state

chapter 38|10 pages

The limits of power and the complexity of powerlessness

The case of immigration

chapter 40|11 pages

The transnational social question

chapter 43|10 pages

The gift paradigm

chapter 44|9 pages

Post-capitalism

The return of radical critique

chapter 45|10 pages

Populism

The concept and the polemic

chapter 46|9 pages

New materialism(s)

chapter 47|11 pages

Political theology

chapter 48|10 pages

Theories of violence