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Stephanie DeGooyer

    Stephanie DeGooyer explores the intricate relationship between law, politics, and aesthetics. Her work delves into how visual and literary forms shape our understanding and experience of legal and political systems. DeGooyer investigates how aesthetics influences our conception of democracy and how this dynamic interplay continues to evolve.

    Before Borders
    The Right to Have Rights
    • The Right to Have Rights

      • 144 pages
      • 6 hours of reading
      3.9(82)Add rating

      Five leading thinkers on the concept of ‘rights’ in an era of rightlessness Sixty years ago, the political theorist Hannah Arendt, an exiled Jew deprived of her German citizenship, observed that before people can enjoy any of the “inalienable” Rights of Man—before there can be any specific rights to education, work, voting, and so on—there must first be such a thing as “the right to have rights.” The concept received little attention at the time, but in our age of mass deportations, Muslim bans, refugee crises, and extra-state war, the phrase has become the center of a crucial and lively debate. Here five leading thinkers from varied disciplines—including history, law, politics, and literary studies—discuss the critical basis of rights and the meaning of radical democratic politics today.

      The Right to Have Rights
    • Reading eighteenth-century legal and prose fiction, DeGooyer draws attention to an overlooked period of immigration history and compels readers to reconsider the creative potential of naturalization.

      Before Borders