Authors: Kwame Anthony Appiah
ISBN-13: 9780691130286, ISBN-10: 0691130280
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Date Published: January 2007
Edition: New
Kwame Anthony Appiah, the president of the PEN American Center, is the author of The Ethics of Identity, Thinking It Through: An Introduction to Contemporary Philosophy, The Honor Code and the prize-winning Cosmopolitanism.
Raised in Ghana and educated in England, he has taught philosophy on three continents and is currently a professor at Princeton University.
"Appiah has written a remarkably impressive book, one that makes a number of important advances on the existing literature and stands as an important contribution to political and moral philosophy and moral psychology. It will be very widely read."Jacob Levy, University of Chicago
"The Ethics of Identity is a major overhaul of the vocabulary of contemporary political and critical thoughtthe vocabulary of identity, diversity, authenticity, cosmopolitanism, and culture. The load of hidden assumptions carried by these words had become overwhelming, and someone needed to take them to the shop and give them a thorough philosophical servicing. But Anthony Appiah has done more than that. He has returned those terms to us clarified, refreshed, and ready for use in a more sophisticated and flexible philosophy of Liberalismand, along the way, he has provided us with a new reading of liberalism's old hero, John Stuart Mill. Appiah's writing is unparalleled in its elegance, its lucidity, and its humanity. Accept no substitutes."Louis Menand, Harvard University
"In the debates over diversity, rights, group identities or group conflict, The Ethics of Identity, is the land of lucidity. Appiah's elegant book resists the easy alternatives of universal liberalism and multiculturalism and instead defendsand illustrates on every pagea rooted cosmopolitanism. The sparkling prose, vivid examples, and probing questions navigate the choppy waters of personal and political constructions of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, and sexuality. This fine and wise book invites readers to remain willing to distinguish tolerance and respectand by engaging with both the lives people make for themselves and the communities and narratives that render them meaningful."Martha Minow, Harvard Law School and author of Identity, Politics, and the Law
Kwame Anthony Appiah, a man of multiple cultures and languages who is able to question culture itself, leaves us better able to contemplate how to lead life well and to relate ethically to others in the process.
Ch. 1 | The ethics of individuality | 1 |
Ch. 2 | Autonomy an its critics | 36 |
Ch. 3 | The demands of identity | 62 |
Ch. 4 | The trouble with culture | 114 |
Ch. 5 | Soul making | 155 |
Ch. 6 | Rooted cosmopolitanism | 213 |