•  99
    Durkheim and the reflexive condition of modernity
    Critical Horizons 7 (1): 179-206. 2006.
    In this essay, Durkheim's work is approached from a double vantage point. One vantage point looks at Durkheim's work with a post-classical attitude that intersects the ontological recasting of the social in the work of Castoriadis. It is in the context of social opening that I will concentrate on Durkheim's work as it presents a model of reflexivity that concentrates on the historical development of the modern period. Durkheim's model of reflexivity also opens onto the other vantage point of pol…Read more
  •  31
    Critical Theory After Habermas: Encounters and Departures (edited book)
    with Dieter Freundlieb and Wayne Hudson
    Brill. 2004.
    The essays in this book engage with the broad range of Jürgen Habermas' work including politics and the public sphere, nature, aesthetics, the linguistic turn and the paradigm of intersubjectivity
  •  97
    Deleuze/derrida: The Politics of Territoriality
    with Jan Bryant, John Cash, John Hewitt, Wei Kwok, Danielle Petherbridge, Gabriele Schwab, and Jeremy Smith
    Critical Horizons 4 (2): 147-156. 2003.
  •  38
    Introduction
    with Julian Triado
    Thesis Eleven 19 (1): 3-4. 1987.
  • Imaginings, narratives, and otherness: on diacritical hermeneutics
    In Peter Gratton & John Panteleimon Manoussakis (eds.), Traversing the Imaginary: Richard Kearney and the Postmodern Challenge, Northwestern University Press. 2007.
  •  70
    Introduction
    with David Roberts and Julian Triado
    Thesis Eleven 19 (1): 3-4. 1987.
  •  83
    Citizens and Strangers: Cosmopolitanism as an Empty Universal
    Critical Horizons 17 (1): 110-122. 2016.
    This paper approaches the issue of cosmopolitanism from the vantage point of hospitality. The notion of hospitality throws into relief some issues that are at the heart of political cosmopolitanism, but cannot be addressed by it. This is because these issues do not necessarily revolve around the category of the citizen, but around the categories of stranger and outsider. The paper critiques the tendency to conflate the categories of the stranger and the outsider and goes on to argue that the sta…Read more
  •  91
    Modernities, civilisations, natures
    with Jan Bryant, John Cash, John Hewitt, and Danielle Petherbridge
    Critical Horizons 3 (2): 159-163. 2002.
  •  19
    Editorial
    with Peter Beilharz and Julian Traido
    Thesis Eleven 8 (1): 2-4. 1984.
  •  59
    Introduction
    with Peter Beilharz
    Thesis Eleven 54 (1). 1998.
  •  103
    This article develops three interconnected arguments concerning the image of modernity as a revolutionary epoch and the way in which this image has been understood and theorized. These three lines of conceptualization, which can only be sketched in less rather than greater detail here, concern the constellation or figuration of modernity, its democratic dimension, and in reference to each, the work of Max Weber, especially The City. More specifically, the article argues that modern democracy is …Read more
  •  147
    Rethinking imagination: culture and creativity (edited book)
    with Gillian Robinson
    Routledge. 1994.
    Discusses the different ways in which the concept of imagination has been construed, and provides fascinating glimpses of the role of imagination in the creation and management of Modernity.
  •  78
    Editorial
    with Jan Bryant, John Cash, John Hewitt, Danielle Petherbridge, and Michael Ure
    Critical Horizons 1 (1): 1-6. 2000.
  •  243
    Introduction
    with Julian Triado
    Thesis Eleven 16 (1): 2-3. 1987.
  •  116
  • Iv. critical essays
    with Australian Bestiarium
    In Said Amir Arjomand & Edward A. Tiryakian (eds.), Rethinking Civilizational Analysis, Sage Publications. pp. 52--201. 2004.
  •  164
    Review Essay: Charles Taylor and the Secularization Thesis
    Critical Horizons 11 (1): 119-132. 2010.
    Charles Taylor, A Secular Age (Cambridge, MA, and London, UK: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2007), ISBN-13:978-0674- 02676-6; 874pp. This review essay concentrates on Charles Taylor's image of modernity
  •  97
  •  36
    Aesthetics and Modernity: Essays by Agnes Heller (edited book)
    Lexington Books. 2010.
    Aesthetics and Modernity brings together Agnes Heller's most recent essays on aesthetic genres such as painting, music, literature and comedy, aesthetic reception and embodiment in the context of the continuing pitfalls of modernity. The essays also throw light on Heller's theories of values, emotions and feelings, embodiment, and modernity. Those with an interest in philosophy, critical theory, aesthetics, and social theory will find this collection illuminating, and an essential addition to an…Read more
  •  68
    Editorial introduction
    with Jan Bryant, John Cash, John Hewitt, Danielle Petherbridge, and Michael Ure
    Critical Horizons 1 (2): 169-173. 2000.
    There has always been a tension between a critique of ‘real existing conditions’ and meta-theoretical paradigms through which the tasks of critique can both be anchored and images of humankind explored.
  •  41
    Introduction
    with Johann P. Arnason
    Thesis Eleven 52 (1). 1998.
  •  125
    The aim of this paper is to examine two turns towards the idea of the creative imagination in contemporary critical theory in the works of Axel Honneth and Cornelius Castoriadis. Honneth's work subsumes the idea of the creative imagination under the paradigm of mutual recognition. Castoriadis constructs the idea of the creative imagination from an ontological perspective. However, Castoriadis' idea of the primary autism of the creative imagination can be thrown into relief by Hegel's Jena Lectur…Read more
  •  186
    Introduction
    with Vince Marotta and Alastair Davidson
    Thesis Eleven 78 (1): 3-7. 2004.
  •  22
    Contemporary Perspectives in Critical and Social Philosophy brings together a range of essays concerning ways of conceptualising modernities, subjectivities, and recognition. It highlights recent developments in German critical and social philosophy and includes essays by Martin Seel, Christoph Menke, Max Pensky, Andrew Bowie, and Karl Ameriks, and critical discussions of the works of Manfred Frank, Theodor Adorno and Axel Honneth