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Liberalism, Diversity and Domination
Kant, Mill and the Government of Difference

Examines how distinctive liberalisms respond to racial, cultural, gender-based and class-based forms of diversity and difference.

Inder S. Marwah (Author)

9781108493789, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 23 May 2019

306 pages
23.4 x 15.5 x 2.2 cm, 0.58 kg

'This is an important book and a necessary read for specialists of Kant's early intellectual development.' Courtney D. Fugate, Journal of the History of Philosophy

This study addresses the complex and often fractious relationship between liberal political theory and difference by examining how distinctive liberalisms respond to human diversity. Drawing on published and unpublished writings, private correspondence and lecture notes, the study offers comprehensive reconstructions of Immanuel Kant's and John Stuart Mill's treatment of racial, cultural, gender-based and class-based difference to understand how two leading figures reacted to pluralism, and what contemporary readers might draw from them. The book mounts a qualified defence of Millian liberalism against Kantianism's predominance in contemporary liberal political philosophy, and resists liberalism's implicit association with imperialist domination by showing different divergent responses to diversity. Here are two distinctive liberal visions of moral and political life.

1. Introduction
2. Unbending crooked timber
3. Difference, diversity and exclusion
4. Democratic character and the affective grounds of politics
5. Complicating barbarism and civilization
6. Millian liberalism
7. Epilogue.

Subject Areas: Political science & theory [JPA], Social & political philosophy [HPS]

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