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Becoming Political: Spinoza's Vital Republicanism and the Democratic Power of Judgment

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In this pathbreaking work, Christopher Skeaff argues that a profoundly democratic conception of judgment is at the heart of Spinoza’s thought. Bridging Continental and Anglo-American scholarship, critical theory, and Spinoza studies, Becoming Political offers a historically sensitive, meticulous, and creative interpretation of Spinoza’s texts that reveals judgment as the communal element by which people generate power to resist domination and reconfigure the terms of their political association. If, for Spinoza, judging is the activity which makes a people powerful, it is because it enables them to contest the project of ruling and demonstrate the political possibility of being equally free to articulate the terms of their association. This proposition differs from a predominant contemporary line of argument that treats the people’s judgment as a vehicle of sovereignty—a means of defining and refining the common will. By recuperating in Spinoza’s thought a “vital republicanism,” Skeaff illuminates a line of political thinking that decouples democracy from the majoritarian aspiration to rule and aligns it instead with the project of becoming free and equal judges of common affairs. As such, this decoupling raises questions that ordinarily go unasked: what calls for political judgment, and who is to judge? In Spinoza’s vital republicanism, the political potential of life and law finds an affirmative relationship that signals the way toward a new constitutionalism and jurisprudence of the common.

Author: Skeaff Christopher
Publisher: CHICAGO UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 208
ISBN: 9780226555478
Cover: Hardback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2018

Acknowledgments

List of Abbreviations

Introduction: Judging Democracy

1 Judgment beyond Jurisdiction

2 Judgment in Common

3 Constitution of Judgment

4 State of Judgment

5 Democracy of Judgment

Coda: A Right to Problems

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Christopher Skeaff earned a doctorate in political theory from Northwestern University and has held research and teaching posts in the University of Michigan’s Society of Fellows and department of political science. He is currently training as a psychotherapist.

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