The Bourgeois Charm of Karl Marx and the Ideological Irony of American Jurisprudence

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Neacsu, Dana
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Boston : BRILL, 2019.
Series:Studies in Critical Social Sciences Ser.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click for online access
Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • The Bourgeois Charm of Karl Marx and the Ideological Irony of American Jurisprudence
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction
  • 1 Marx, Irony and Ideology
  • Negotiating Meaning
  • 2 Meaning as a Result of Textual Instigation and Interpellation
  • 1 Contextualizing Marx: Differentiating to Embrace or to Reject?
  • 1 Marx and Dewey
  • 2 Linguistic and Cultural Barriers to Marx's Works
  • 3 The Cultural Lifespan of Scholarship
  • 4 Marxian Ideology as Soviet, ergo, Undesired, Subjectivity
  • 5 Marx's Un-American Attitude toward Religion
  • 6 Marx's Unshaken Belief in Human Progress
  • 2 Marxian or Marxism: Labels Differentiating Content or Fabricating Difference?
  • 3 Textual Differences and Marx's Interdisciplinary Dialectics
  • 1 Dialectics and Ideology Thinking, Researching and Incorporating Observations
  • 2 Marxian Interdisciplinary Dialectics
  • 3 Dialectics and Post-marxian Scholarship
  • 4 Private Subjectivity
  • Alienation and Theory Production
  • 1 Alienation as Creative Reification
  • 2 Alienation and Ideological Resistance to Power Structures
  • 3 Alienation and Scholastic Needs
  • 5 Ideology as Public (Political) Subjectivity
  • 1 Ideology through the Ages
  • 2 The Case against (Academic) Ideological Purges
  • 3 Mass Media
  • Technology Actuating Ideology
  • 4 Ideological Meaning-Making
  • 6 The Irony of Scholarship Production
  • 1 Encoded Irony in T1
  • 2 Dormant Irony as T1's Textual Omissions
  • 3 Textual Irony and Rorty's Intellectual Ironist
  • 7 Ideological Irony
  • S2's Ideology Actuating T1's Irony
  • 1 Irony and Direct Scholastic Criticism
  • 2 Scholarship as (Ironic) Polite Criticism
  • 8 The Bearable Lightness of Jurisprudential Irony
  • 1 Jurisprudential Irony as an Inescapable Trade-Off between Scholastic Ambition and Reality
  • 2 Jurisprudential Irony and the Socratic Method of Teaching Law
  • 3 Jurisprudential Irony
  • Byproduct of Legal Hegemony
  • 4 Encoded Jurisprudential Irony
  • 5 Jurisprudential Irony and the Supreme Court The Case of Justice Antonin Scalia and Justice Neil Gorsuch
  • 9 Philosophical Camaraderie, Ideological Difference, and Irony
  • 1 Plato's Concepts of Just and Justice
  • 2 Aristotle's Dialectical Universals
  • 3 Thomas Hobbes and John Locke's Ideological Differences Lead to Diverse Epistemological Conclusions
  • 4 The Intersection between the Abstract and Concrete Facets of the Law according to Montesquieu, Kant and Rousseau
  • 5 Jeremy Bentham's Common Sense and Grotius' Technocratic Approach to Law
  • 6 American Jurisprudence and Marx Strange Bedfellows . Not
  • 10 Irony, Jurisprudential Meaning-Making, and Ideological Camaraderie
  • 1 Classical Liberalism and Marx
  • 2 Law as Science or the Rejection of Ideology
  • 3 Formalism and Realism Two Sides of the Same Coin