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Regulating Aversion: Tolerance in the Age of Identity and Empire Paperback / softback - 2008
by Wendy Brown
- New
- Paperback
Description
Standard delivery: 14 to 21 days
Details
- Title Regulating Aversion: Tolerance in the Age of Identity and Empire
- Author Wendy Brown
- Binding Paperback / softback
- Edition 3rd printing, fi
- Condition New
- Pages 288
- Volumes 1
- Language ENG
- Publisher Princeton University Press, Princeton
- Date 2008-01-27
- Bookseller's Inventory # B9780691136219
- ISBN 9780691136219 / 0691136211
- Weight 0.91 lbs (0.41 kg)
- Dimensions 9.15 x 6.64 x 0.69 in (23.24 x 16.87 x 1.75 cm)
- Dewey Decimal Code 179.9
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From the rear cover
"This is a brilliant book. Wendy Brown has made the reader understand 'tolerance' in a new and more provocative way. Alerting us to its genealogy, she demonstrates the ambiguity of any politics that seeks to found itself on this much-touted liberal virtue. Regulating Aversion is a remarkable--and remarkably rigorous--contribution to the considerable literature on tolerance and the limits of the tolerable. Anyone wanting to think seriously about multiculturalism, cosmopolitanism, and democratic pluralism in our time must read it."--Talal Asad, CUNY Graduate Center
"Wendy Brown's Regulating Aversion is clear, rigorous, and unusually bold in an academic atmosphere that is now far from sympathetic to its kind of radical critique. Brown has done a wonderful job of orchestrating her argument, and it has been articulated with wit. The book is a worthy successor to her best and most politically astute contributions. This is an important work."--Paul Gilroy, London School of Economics
"In this fascinating and provocative book, Brown brings into sharp analytical focus a perplexing phenomenon: in political discourse since the late twentieth century, both the objects and content of tolerance have shifted. The sweep of Brown's analysis is impressive: she deftly weaves together critiques of contemporary politics with thoughtful explorations of the history of liberal thought on tolerance."--Melissa Williams, University of Toronto