Other
Spanish
ID: <
10670/1.dxyqxg>
Abstract
The publication of Theory of Militancy: Organization and Popular Power at the end of 2018 has opened a new and challenging panorama for postfoundationalist political thought, which is today in vogue in philosophy and social sciences. Following in his footsteps and his criticism Ernesto Laclau's work, in this paper we show how the irruption of antagonism plays a fundamental role in the constitution of militant subjectivity and how the violence that divides us also puts us in front of the possibility of assuming a more autonomous point of view, free from any reference to an overprotective Other.