Human Dignity and Political Criticism | National Humanities Center

Work of the Fellows: Monographs

Human Dignity and Political Criticism

By Colin Bird (NHC Fellow, 2008–09)

Book cover of Human Dignity and Political Criticism

Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2021

From the publisher’s description:

Many, including Karl Marx, John Rawls, and the contemporary Black Lives Matter movement, embrace the ambition to secure terms of co-existence in which the worth of people’s lives becomes a lived reality rather than an empty boast. This book asks whether, as some believe, the philosophical idea of human dignity can help achieve that ambition.

Offering a new fourfold typology of dignity concepts, Colin Bird argues that human dignity can perform this role only if certain traditional ways of conceiving it are abandoned. Accordingly, Bird rejects the idea that human dignity refers to the inherent worth or status of individuals, and instead reinterprets it as a social relation, constituted by affects of respect and the modes of mutual attention which they generate. What emerges is a new vision of human dignity as a vital political value, and an arresting vindication of its role as an agent of critical reflection on politics.

Subjects
Philosophy / Political Science / Human Dignity / Political Theory / Critical Theory / Social Criticism / Theory of Value / Karl Marx / John Rawls /

Bird, Colin (NHC Fellow, 2008–09). Human Dignity and Political Criticism. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2021.