1 Acknowledgments 2 Introduction Part 3 Part I: Reworking the Enlightenment Tradition Chapter 4 Chapter 1. On Organizing, Solidarity, and the Enlightenment Chapter 5 Chapter 2. Combating Inequalities of the Sexual Kind: Enlightenment Universalism and the Horizon of Inclusion Chapter 6 Chapter 3. Reason and Enlightenment: The Values of Modernity Part 7 Part II: Cosmopolitanism and Human Rights Chapter 8 Chapter 4. The Curious Case of Cosmopolitan Sensibility Chapter 9 Chapter 5. Reclaiming Internationalism for Our Times: The Cosmopolitan Ideal and Human Rights in the Global Era Chapter 10 Chapter 6. The History of Human Rights and Critical Theory Part 11 Part III: Reflections on Critical Theory Chapter 12 Chapter 7. Psychoanalysis and the Rational Subject: The Problem of Agency Chapter 13 Chapter 8.
Feminism, Tradition, and Ideology Chapter 14 Chapter 9. Embodiment as Resistance: Evaluating Stephen Bronner's Contributions to Critical Theory Chapter 15 Chapter 10. Marxism, Ethics, and the Task of Critical Theory Part 16 Part IV: Rethinking Socialist Tradition and Theory Chapter 17 Chapter 11. Socialism: Liberal or Democratic-Republican? Chapter 18 Chapter 12. Concepts, Traditions, and Actions: Rescuing Political Theory from the History of Political Thought Chapter 19 Chapter 13. The Materialist Principle "Unbound": Socialist History and the Reconstruction of a Movement Chapter 20 Chapter 14. Bronner vs. Fukuyama: 1989, the End of History, and the New Internationalism 21 Appendix: An Interview with Stephen Eric Bronner: The Enlightenment and its Critics.