Universality, Resistance, and the Struggle for Recognition. Challenging the Inevitability of Hegel’s Rabble Cover Image

Universality, Resistance, and the Struggle for Recognition. Challenging the Inevitability of Hegel’s Rabble
Universality, Resistance, and the Struggle for Recognition. Challenging the Inevitability of Hegel’s Rabble

Author(s): Sabeen Ahmed
Subject(s): Political Philosophy, Social Philosophy, German Idealism
Published by: Trivent Publishing
Keywords: Hegel; Recognition; Social and Political Philosophy; Resistance; Rabble; Poverty; Right of Necessity;

Summary/Abstract: Inspired by the pioneering work of Robert R. Williams and Axel Honneth, this article offers a new lens through which to consider Hegel’s infamous ‘rabble problem.’ By rethinking the conflict between the rabble and the State as a conflict between intersubjective and institutional recognition—generating a failure of reciprocal recognition—I suggest that there is embedded in Hegel's right of necessity a right of resistance that the rabble may justifiably claim in their struggle for recognition. The existence of the rabble, I ultimately suggest, is therefore not an inevitable consequence of the State, but an indication that the State has itself failed to concretize the universal consciousness of Spirit.

  • Issue Year: 4/2020
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 74-91
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: English