Political Emotions: Why Love Matters for Justice
Martha C. Nussbaum. Harvard Univ./Belknap, $35 (462p) ISBN 978-0-674-72465-5
The latest book from University of Chicago law and ethics professor Nussbaum (The Fragility of Goodness) stimulates readers with challenging insights on the role of emotion in political life. Her provocative theory of social change shows how a truly just society might be realized through the cultivation and studied liberation of emotions, specifically love. To that end, the book sparkles with Nussbaum’s characteristic literary analysis, drawing from both Western and South Asian sources, including a deep reading of public monuments. In one especially notable passage, Nussbaum artfully interprets Mozart’s The Marriage of Figaro, revealing it as a musical meditation on the emotionality of revolutionary politics and feminism. Such chapters are a culmination of her passion for seeing art and literature as philosophical texts, a theme in her writing that she profitably continues here. The elegance with which she negotiates this diverse material deserves special praise, as she expertly takes the reader through analyses of philosophy, opera, primatology, psychology, and poetry. In contrast to thinkers like John Rawls, who imagined an already just world, Nussbaum addresses how to order our society to reach such a world. A plea for recognizing the power of art, symbolism, and enchantment in public life, Nussbaum’s cornucopia of ideas effortlessly commands attention and debate. (Oct.)
Details
Reviewed on: 08/12/2013
Genre: Nonfiction
Open Ebook - 469 pages - 978-0-674-72828-8
Paperback - 480 pages - 978-0-674-50380-9