•  174
    The Power of Tolerance: A Debate
    Columbia University Press. 2014.
    We invoke the ideal of tolerance in response to conflict, but what does it mean to answer conflict with a call for tolerance? Is tolerance a way of resolving conflicts or a means of sustaining them? Does it transform conflicts into productive tensions, or does it perpetuate underlying power relations? To what extent does tolerance hide its involvement with power and act as a form of depoliticization? Wendy Brown and Rainer Forst debate the uses and misuses of tolerance, an exchange that highligh…Read more
  •  418
    La activista, filósofa política y profesora emérita de la Universidad de Berkeley Wendy Brown participó en el Festival de las Ideas con una conversación con el periodista Jesús García Calero sobre la pérdida de valores. En esta entrevista el profesor de la UCM Antonio Sánchez Domínguez repasó las ideas que recoge en su extensa obra ensayística, cuyo último título es "Tiempos nihilistas" (Lengua de Trapo y Círculo de Bellas Artes, 2023), donde defiende la construcción de una izquierda crítica y e…Read more
  •  89
    Left Conservatism, I
    Theory and Event 2 (2). 1998.
  •  155
    Democracy in What State?
    with Giorgio Agamben, Alain Badiou, Daniel Bensaïd, Jean-Luc Nancy, Jacques Rancière, Kristin Ross, and Slavoj Zizek
    Columbia University Press. 2011.
    "Is it meaningful to call oneself a democrat? And if so, how do you interpret the word?" In responding to this question, eight iconoclastic thinkers prove the rich potential of democracy, along with its critical weaknesses, and reconceive the practice to accommodate new political and cultural realities. Giorgio Agamben traces the tense history of constitutions and their coexistence with various governments. Alain Badiou contrasts current democratic practice with democratic communism. Daniel Bens…Read more
  •  89
    Sovereignty and the return of the repressed
    In David Campbell & Morton Schoolman (eds.), The New Pluralism: William Connolly and the Contemporary Global Condition, Duke University Press. pp. 250--272. 2008.
  •  87
    Question and Answer Period UC, Santa Cruz, 1/31/98
    with Christopher Leigh Connery, Judith Butler, Paul A. Bové, and Joseph A. Buttigieg
    Theory and Event 2 (3). 1998.
  •  72
    Democracy in What State?
    with Giorgio Agamben, Alain Badiou, Daniel Bensaid, Jean-Luc Nancy, Jacques Rancière, Kristin Ross, and Slavoj ŽI.žek
    Columbia University Press. 2012.
    "Is it meaningful to call oneself a democrat? And if so, how do you interpret the word?" In responding to this question, eight iconoclastic thinkers prove the rich potential of democracy, along with its critical weaknesses, and reconceive the practice to accommodate new political and cultural realities. Giorgio Agamben traces the tense history of constitutions and their coexistence with various governments. Alain Badiou contrasts current democratic practice with democratic communism. Daniel Bens…Read more
  • Sovereign hesitations
    In Pheng Cheah & Suzanne Guerlac (eds.), Derrida and the time of the political, Duke University Press. 2009.
  •  101
    Tolerance is generally regarded as an unqualified achievement of the modern West. Emerging in early modern Europe to defuse violent religious conflict and reduce persecution, tolerance today is hailed as a key to decreasing conflict across a wide range of other dividing lines-- cultural, racial, ethnic, and sexual. But, as political theorist Wendy Brown argues in Regulating Aversion, tolerance also has dark and troubling undercurrents. Dislike, disapproval, and regulation lurk at the heart of to…Read more
  •  464
    Suffering Rights as Paradoxes
    Constellations 7 (2): 208-229. 2000.
  •  175
    At the Edge
    Political Theory 30 (4): 556-576. 2002.
    Here lies the vocation of those who preserve our understanding of past theories, who sharpen our sense of the subtle, complex interplay between political experience and thought, and who preserve our memory of the agonizing efforts of intellect to restate the possibilities and threats posed by political dilemmas of the past. —Sheldon S. Wolin, “Political Theory as a Vocation” In the same way in which the great transformation of the first industrial revolution destroyed the social and political st…Read more
  •  468
    Wounded Attachments
    Political Theory 21 (3): 390-410. 1993.
    If something is to stay in the memory, it must be burned in: only that which never ceases to hurt stays in the memory. Friedrich Nietzsche ( from On the Genealogy of Morals)
  •  170
    Supposing Truth Were a Woman.
    Political Theory 16 (4): 594-616. 1988.
    What is found at the historical beginnings of things is not the inviolable identity of their origin; it is the dissention of other things. It is diaparity. —Michel Foucault.
  •  145
    States of Injury: Power and Freedom in Late Modernity
    Princeton University Press. 1995.
    Whether in characterizing Catharine MacKinnon's theory of gender as itself pornographic or in identifying liberalism as unable to make good on its promises, Wendy Brown pursues a central question: how does a sense of woundedness become the basis for a sense of identity? Brown argues that efforts to outlaw hate speech and pornography powerfully legitimize the state: such apparently well-intentioned attempts harm victims further by portraying them as so helpless as to be in continuing need of gove…Read more
  •  426
    American Nightmare
    Political Theory 34 (6): 690-714. 2006.
    Neoliberalism and neoconservatism are two distinct political rationalities in the contemporary United States. They have few overlapping formal characteristics, and even appear contradictory in many respects. Yet they converge not only in the current presidential administration but also in their de-democratizing effects. Their respective devaluation of political liberty, equality, substantive citizenship, and the rule of law in favor of governance according to market criteria on the one side, and…Read more