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“Critchley is Žižek” : in defence of critical political philosophy

journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by Matthew Sharpe
In an ironically Žižekian manner, this paper argues that Simon Critchley and Slavoj Žižek's apparent political disagreement (ludic reformist versus strident revolutionary) conceal a common set of preconditions and presuppositions. These presuppositions can be summed by the slogan “the forgetting of political philosophy”, which more specifically means the forgetting of the difference between philosophy and political life, and the reflective need to find mediations between the two. Critchley's turn to humour honours the notion that politics is about the realm of appearances, while Žižek's frank avowal of the “diabolical evil” of the subject of the death drive makes patently clear the dangers posed by a “politics of Truth”.

History

Journal

Critical horizons

Volume

10

Issue

2

Pagination

180 - 196

Publisher

Equinox Publishing Ltd.

Location

Sheffield, U. K.

ISSN

1440-9917

eISSN

1568-5160

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, Acumen Publishing Ltd.