ABSTRACT

Chantal Mouffe’s writings have been innovatory with respect to democratic theory, Marxism and feminism. Her work derives from, and has always been engaged with, contemporary political events and intellectual debates. This sense of conflict informs both the methodological and substantive propositions she offers. Determinisms, scientific or otherwise, and ideologies, Marxist or feminist, have failed to survive her excoriating critiques. In a sense she is the original post-Marxist, rejecting economisms and class-centric analyses, and also the original post-feminist, more concerned with the varieties of ‘identity politics’ than with any singularities of ‘women’s issues’.

While Mouffe’s concerns with power and discourse derive from her studies of Gramsci’s theorisations of hegemony and the post-structuralisms of Derrida and Foucault, her reversal of the very terms through which political theory proceeds is very much her own. She centres conflict, not consensus, and disagreement, not finality. Whether philosophically perfectionist, or liberally reasonable, political theorists have been challenged by Mouffe to think again, and to engage with a new concept of ‘the political’ and a revived and refreshed notion of ‘radical democracy’.

The editor has focused on her work in three key areas:

  • Hegemony: From Gramsci to ‘Post-Marxism’
  • Radical Democracy: Pluralism, Citizenship and Identity
  • The Political: A Politics Beyond Consensus

The volume concludes with a new interview with Chantal Mouffe.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

Democracy and conflict in the work of Chantal Mouffe

part 1|75 pages

Hegemony

chapter 2|13 pages

Hegemony and new Political Subjects

Toward a new concept of democracy (1988) 1

chapter 3|30 pages

Post-Marxism without Apologies (1987)

(With Ernesto Laclau)

part II|65 pages

Radical Democracy

part III|82 pages

The Political

chapter 9|10 pages

The Radical Centre

A politics without adversary (1998) 1

chapter 11|10 pages

Politics and Passions

The stakes of democracy (2002) 1

chapter 15|9 pages

An Interview with Chantal Mouffe

Questions by James Martin