Against War

Against War

Views from the Underside of Modernity

  • Author: Maldonado-Torres, Nelson; Mignolo, Walter D.; Silverblatt, Irene; Saldívar-Hull, Sonia
  • Publisher: Duke University Press
  • Serie: Latin america otherwise
  • ISBN: 9780822341468
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780822388999
  • Place of publication:  Durham , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2008
  • Month: April
  • Pages: 360
  • DDC: 172/.42
  • Language: English
Nelson Maldonado-Torres argues that European modernity has become inextricable from the experience of the warrior and conqueror. In Against War, he develops a powerful critique of modernity, and he offers a critical response combining ethics, political theory, and ideas rooted in Christian and Jewish thought. Maldonado-Torres focuses on the perspectives of those who inhabit the underside of western modernity, particularly Jewish, black, and Latin American theorists. He analyzes the works of the Jewish Lithuanian-French philosopher and religious thinker Emmanuel Levinas, the Martiniquean psychiatrist and political thinker Frantz Fanon, and the Catholic Argentinean-Mexican philosopher, historian, and theologian Enrique Dussel.

Considering Levinas’s critique of French liberalism and Nazi racial politics, and the links between them, Maldonado-Torres identifies a “master morality” of dominion and control at the heart of western modernity. This master morality constitutes the center of a warring paradigm that inspires and legitimizes racial policies, imperial projects, and wars of invasion. Maldonado-Torres refines the description of modernity’s war paradigm and the Levinasian critique through Fanon’s phenomenology of the colonized and racial self and the politics of decolonization, which he reinterprets in light of the Levinasian conception of ethics. Drawing on Dussel’s genealogy of the modern imperial and warring self, Maldonado-Torres theorizes race as the naturalization of war’s death ethic. He offers decolonial ethics and politics as an antidote to modernity’s master morality and the paradigm of war. Against War advances the de-colonial turn, showing how theory and ethics cannot be conceived without politics, and how they all need to be oriented by the imperative of decolonization in the modern/colonial and postmodern world.

  • Contents
  • About the Series
  • Preface
  • Abbreviations of Frequently Cited Titles
  • Introduction: Western Modernity and the Paradigm of War
  • Part I: Searching for Ethics in a Violent World: A Jewish Response to the Paradigm of War
    • From Liberalism to Hitlerism: Tracing the Origins of Violence and War
    • From Fraternity to Altericity, or Reasonin the Service of Love
  • Part II: Of Masters and Slaves, or Frantz Fanon and the Ethico-Political Struggle for Non-Sexist Human Fraternity
    • God and the Other in the Self-Recognitionof Imperial Man
    • Recognition from Below: The Meaning of the Cry and the Gift of the Self in the Struggle for Recognition
  • Part III: From the Ethical to the Geopolitical: A Latin American Response to Coloniality, Neoliberal Globalization, and War
    • Enrique Dussel’s Ethics and Philosophy of Liberation
    • Enrique Dussel’s Contribution to the De-colonial Turn: From the Critique of Modernity to Transmodernity
  • Conclusion: Beyond the Paradigm of War
  • Notes
  • Bibliography

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