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The Empire's New Clothes: Reading Hardt and Negri (Paperback)
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Short Description for The Empire's New Clothes"Empire's New Clothes" examines the crucially important title "Empire" in all its complexity as a work of legal and political theory that diagnoses our era and urges liberatory action.
Full description- Publisher: ROUTLEDGE
- Published: 11 December 2003
- Format: Paperback 272 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Politics & Government | Political Science & Theory | General & World History | Social & Cultural History
- ISBN 13: 9780415935555 ISBN 10: 0415935555
- Sales rank: 741,449
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Full description for The Empire's New Clothes
Since its publication last year, Empire has come to dominate the academic world, stimulating debate and discussion throughout the humanities, social sciences, and into the mainstream media. The New York Times made outrageous claims about its importance, pointing to the "scholarly commotion" it has caused, and suggesting a book like this comes along only "once every decade or so" (July 7, 2001). Translation rights to Empire have been sold in ten countries already and the question has been raised whether Michael Hardt, one of the two authors, is the next Jacques Derrida. A new theoretical idea has been hitched to the voguish concern over globalization, and Empire describes the new form of sovereignty that has emerged under conditions of globalization ("Empire"); delivers an account of a new emancipatory subject (the "multitude"); and advances a set of empirical claims about the terrain of the processes that have come to be understood as "globalization." It's also a manifesto of sorts for the revolution in an age of globalization. With pieces by Slavoj Zizek, Ernesto Laclau, and others, Empire's New Clothes addresses Empire in all its complexity, that is, as a work of legal and political theory that diagnoses our era and urges liberatory action. More precisely, it will set the outlines of the debate as it is emerging around the claims of Empire. Ruth Bachman, University of British Columbia Malcom Bull, Oxford (and the original London Review of Books reviewer) Peter Fitzpatrick, University of London Sundhya Pah

