Politics of Happiness
Connecting the Philosophical Ideas of Hegel, Nietzsche and Derrida to the Political Ideologies of Happiness
- 208 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Politics of Happiness
Connecting the Philosophical Ideas of Hegel, Nietzsche and Derrida to the Political Ideologies of Happiness
About This Book
This unique and engaging study argues that the Western concern with achieving happiness should be understood in terms of its relationship to the political ideologies that have emerged since the Enlightenment. To do so, each chapter examines the place that happiness occupies in the construction of ideologies that have formed the political terrain of the West, including liberalism, postmodernism, socialism, fascism, and religion. Throughout, Hegel's phenomenology, Nietzsche's genealogy, and Derrida's account of deconstruction as reactions to modernization are used to show that the politics of happiness are always a clash of fundamental ideas of belonging, overcoming, and ethical responsibility. Stressing that the concept of happiness lies at the foundation of political movements, the book also looks at its place in the current global order, analyzing the emergence of such ideas as affective democracy that challenge the conventional notions of privatized, acquisitive happiness.
Written in a clear manner, the work will appeal to political theory students and researchers looking for a critical and historical account of contemporary debates about the nature of happiness and ideology.
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Table of contents
- FC
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Dedication
- Quotes
- Introduction: Elements of the Politics of Happiness
- 1 Liberalism and the Uses of Desire
- 2 Postmodernism, or The Dream of Limitless Possibility
- 3 Marxism, Socialism and the Beautiful Object of Labour
- 4 Fascism and the Pleasure of Self-Annihilation
- 5 Religion and the Love of the Sacred
- Conclusion: Happiness in the Time of Catastrophe
- Bibliography
- Index