Resources of Critique
Alex Callinicos
How does social critique situate itself philosophically today, after  
the marginalization of Marxism and the impact of postmodernism? This  
title intends to address this question systematically. It surv ...
Polity Press
Paperback
328 p.
ISBN: 0745631614
EAN/ISBN13: 9780745631615
  How does social critique situate itself philosophically today, after  
the marginalization of Marxism and the impact of postmodernism? This  
title intends to address this question systematically. It surveys some  
of the most influential contemporary critical theorists, such as Alain  
Badiou, Jacques Bidet, Luc Boltanski, Eve Chiapello and Slavoj i ek.
Social criticism has enjoyed a renaissance in the past few years. The  
anti-globalization protests at Seattle and Genoa and the great marches  
against the war in Iraq have put contestation of capitalism and  
imperialism back on the political and intellectual agenda. But how  
does social critique situate itself philosophically today, after the  
marginalization of Marxism and the impact of postmodernism? In "The  
Resources of Critique", Alex Callinicos seeks to address this question  
systematically. He does so, in the first part, by surveying some of  
the most influential contemporary critical theorists Alain Badiou,  
Jacques Bidet, Luc Boltanski, Pierre Bourdieu, Eve Chiapello, Jurgen  
Habermas, Antonio Negri and Slavoj i ek. The limitations of all these  
theorists perspectives prompts Callinicos in the second part of the  
book to outline an alternative approach whose main elements are a  
critical realist ontology, a Marxist theory of social contradiction,  
and an egalitarian conception of justice.The main thrust of his  
argument is to show that Marx's critique of political economy remains  
inescapable for anyone seeking to challenge the existing world order  
but only if it maintains an open but rigorous dialogue with other  
critical perspectives. "The Resources of Critique" is, above all, a  
contribution to this dialogue.
Table of contents
* Introduction
* Part I: Four Kinds of Impasse
1. Modernity and its Promises: Habermas and Bidet
1.1 Between sociological suspicion and the rule of law: * Jurgen  
Habermas
1.2 With and against Marx and Rawls: Jacques Bidet
2. Between Relativism and Universalism: French * Critical Sociology
2.1 Capitalism and its critiques: Boltanski and Chiapello
2.2 The dialectic of universal and particular: Pierre Bourdieu
3. Touching the Void: Badiou and i ek
3.1 The exception is the norm
3.2 Miracles do happen: the ontology of Alain Badiou
3.3 Unreal: Slavoj i ek and the proletariat
4. The Generosity of Being: Antonio Negri
4.1 All is grace
4.2 Negri's Grundrisse: revolutionary subjectivity versus * Marxist  
'objectivism'
4.3 The refusal of transcendence
* Part II: Three Dimensions of Progress
5. A Critical Realist Ontology
5.1 The story so far
5.2 Dimensions of realism
6. Structure and Contradiction
6.1 Realism about structures
6.2 The primacy of contradiction
6.3 A dialectic of nature?
7. Justice and Universality
7.1 From fact to value
7.2 Equality and well-being
7.3 Why equality matters
8. Conclusion
Alex Callinicos is Professor of European Studies at Kings College,  
London.