Abstract
Ernesto Laclau?s work, On Populist Reason, is a crucial landmark in the
attempts of post-modern political philosophy to grasp the logic of
contingency at work in the production of political subjects. However, in
recent years, this post-foundationalist approach seems to have reached an
impasse when confronted with the persistence, success and efficacy of
certain poles of identification that seem to resist the idea of a radical
contingency of collective engagements. I argue that a new dialogue between
the Hegelian philosophy of history and Laclau?s post-foundationalism can be
fruitful in overcoming this stalemate. Rather than reigniting the debate
surrounding historicism, Laclau?s evocation of the notion of peoples without
history allows for an exploration of the radical heterogeneity implied in
the situational, somatic, and affective rootedness of the formation of
historical identities. I ground this hypothesis in a detailed examining of
Hegel?s own take on the a-historical spiritual formations and on the
difference he makes between the ?people?, as institutionalized collective
consciousness and the ?nation? as its situated genesis. I claim that this
Hegelian dialectic approach to nationhood far from does not limit the
political horizons to the ?nationalist? or ?nativist? rhetoric. Instead, it
offers a new light on the challenges of post-foundationalist approaches when
it comes to understanding the concreteness of political subjectivation.
Publisher
National Library of Serbia