ABSTRACT

The core idea shared by all cosmopolitan views is that all human beings belong to a single community and the ultimate units of moral concern are individual human beings, not states or particular forms of human associations. Nevertheless, the attempts to ground a political theory on overarching universal principles is in contradiction with the plurality of social, cultural, political, religious interpretative standpoints in the contemporary world. Is dissent cosmopolitan? Is there a legacy of dissent for a theory of cosmopolitanism?

This book is a comparative, historical analysis of dissident thought and practice for contemporary debates on cosmopolitanism. Divided into two parts, the editors and contributors explore the contribution of ‘paradigmatic’ dissidents like Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Havel, Sakharov, Mandela, Liu Xiaobo, Aung San Suu Kyi towards a post-universalist cosmopolitan theory. Part Two examines the inherent cosmopolitanism of the seemingly ‘peripheral’ dissent of contemporary forms of protests, resistance, direct action like NO TAV movement and Occupy Wall Street.

A timely book which allows for a much needed new engagement in contemporary debates of cosmopolitanism, we learn how practical resistance to totalizing/hegemonic claims is generated, and how dissident thinking might contribute to new, enriched ways of conceiving the non-totalizing foundations of cosmopolitanism. An innovative look at what lessons can scholars of cosmopolitanism learn from dissent/dissident movements, and what the role of dissent in cosmopolitan democracy could be.

chapter |27 pages

Introduction

Cosmopolitanism of Dissent

part |80 pages

Cosmopolitanism and the Legacy of Dissidence

chapter |18 pages

Havel's Agonistic Realism

What Can Cosmopolitan Thinkers Learn from the Eastern European Dissent?

chapter |18 pages

Remembering Dissidents

Cosmopolitan Challenges in Post-Socialist Slovenia

chapter |20 pages

Is Liu Xiaobo a Rooted Cosmopolitan?

A Critical Examination of His Dissent from a Historical Perspective

part |82 pages

Cosmopolitanism and the Legacy of Civil Disobedience

chapter |23 pages

The Universalist Aspirations of Nationalist Dissent

Lessons from the Debates between Gandhi and Tagore

chapter |20 pages

Contestatory Cosmopolitan Citizenship

The Legacy of Martin Luther King 1

chapter |20 pages

Civil Disobedience in Cosmopolitan Perspective

National Responsibility, Citizenship, Representation

part |81 pages

Cosmopolitanism and the Promise of Global Resistance

chapter |20 pages

Global Citizenship versus Cosmopolitanism

Lessons Learned from Chinese Dissidents, Global Indigenous Peoples Movement and the Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities

chapter |23 pages

Channeling Dissent

Multicultural Encounters with Cosmopolitan Normativity 1

chapter |15 pages

The Logistics of Dissent

Prefigurative Politics in Occupy Wall Street