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Acknowledgments vi
Introduction: Wittgenstein and the Scene of Contemporary Political Theory 1
1 Theorizing as a Lived Experience: A Wittgensteinian Investigation 21
2 Wittgenstein's Philosophy after the Disaster 44
3 Wittgenstein and Citizenship: Reading Socrates in Tehran 66
4 Why Wittgenstein is Not Conservative: Conventions and Critique 87
5 Aspect-Blindness in Religion, Philosophy, and Law: The Force of Wittgensteinian Reading 115
6 Seeing as it Happens: Theorizing Politics through the Eyes of Wittgenstein 134
7 Bare Life: Comedy, Trust, and Language in Wittgenstein and Beckett 156
Conclusion: The Personal is the Theoretical 176
Bibliography 179
Index 193
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Wittgenstein and Political Theory: The View from Somewhere. Christopher C. Robinson, Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889—1951) was one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century. Although his writings have influenced a range of philosophical and cultural movements, his effect has been less well-recognized in a political context.
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Wittgenstein and Political Theory: The View from Somewhere. Christopher C. Robinson, Ludwig Wittgenstein (1889—1951) was one of the most important philosophers of the twentieth century. Although his writings have influenced a range of philosophical and cultural movements, his effect has been less well-recognized in a political context.
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