Explore the latest books of this year!
Bookbot

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
    • 2023

      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
    • 2018

      The Right to Have Rights

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

      Hannah Arendt has captured the contemporary imagination by so often refusing orthodoxy, and also defying the rules and strictures of political theory. The Right to Have Rights continues these traditions, taking up one of her most disruptive ideas-'the right to have rights'-and assigning a different author to unpack each of its constituent elements. The result is a marvelous deconstruction of a vexing concept, and a wonderful new way of doing theory. At once idiosyncratic and informative, personal and impersonal, The Right to Have Rights has a gravitational pull that is nearly as irresistible as the work of Arendt herself. -Corey Robin, author of The Reactionary Mind: Conservatism from Edmund Burke to Donald Trump 'The right to have rights' is evoked so frequently that it has become a cliché. This important collection restores to Arendt's idea its critical dimension: rights alone are an insufficient basis for democracy; rights alone provide no bulwark against forced migration, expropriation, and war. At a time when global capitalism simultaneously recognizes and disavows all manner of rights, these diverse and compelling essays clarify the stake of resistance. -Jodi Dean, author of Crowds and Party Five strikingly original thinkers return to Hannah Arendt's account of the vulnerability of human beings denied membership in a polity. What can it mean to speak of a 'right to have rights' when citizenship is denied to some, eroded or undercut for others and, for still others, perverted into nationalism? These essays underscore the urgency of getting the questions right. -Jedediah Purdy, author of After Nature: A Politics for the Anthropocene

      The Right to Have Rights