Many on the Left have looked upon "universal" as a dirty word, one that signals liberalism\'s failure to recognize the masculinist and Eurocentric assumptions from which it proceeds.
In this book, one of our most important political philosophers builds on these critiques of the tacit exclusions of Enlightenment thought, while at the same time wor.
In rejecting universalism, we have learned to reorient politics around particulars, positionalities, identities, immanence, and multiple modernities.
Many on the Left have looked upon "universal" as a dirty word, one that signals liberalism\'s failure to recognize the masculinist and Eurocentric assumptions from which it proceeds