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Uncommon Sense Jeremy Bentham Queer Aesthetics And The Politics Of Taste Carrie D Shanafelt

  • SKU: BELL-42724314
Uncommon Sense Jeremy Bentham Queer Aesthetics And The Politics Of Taste Carrie D Shanafelt
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Uncommon Sense Jeremy Bentham Queer Aesthetics And The Politics Of Taste Carrie D Shanafelt instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Virginia Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 16.67 MB
Pages: 200
Author: Carrie D. Shanafelt
ISBN: 9780813946887, 0813946883
Language: English
Year: 2022

Product desciption

Uncommon Sense Jeremy Bentham Queer Aesthetics And The Politics Of Taste Carrie D Shanafelt by Carrie D. Shanafelt 9780813946887, 0813946883 instant download after payment.

Infamous for authoring two concepts since favored by government powers seeking license for ruthlessness—the utilitarian notion of privileging the greatest happiness for the most people and the panopticon—Jeremy Bentham is not commonly associated with political emancipation. But perhaps he should be. In his private manuscripts, Bentham agonized over the injustice of laws prohibiting sexual nonconformity, questioning state policy that would put someone to death merely for enjoying an uncommon pleasure. He identified sources of hatred for sexual nonconformists in philosophy, law, religion, and literature, arguing that his goal of "the greatest happiness" would be impossible as long as authorities dictate whose pleasures can be tolerated and whose must be forbidden. Ultimately, Bentham came to believe that authorities worked to maximize the suffering of women, colonized and enslaved persons, and sexual nonconformists in order to demoralize disenfranchised people and prevent any challenge to power. In Uncommon Sense, Carrie Shanafelt reads Bentham’s sexual nonconformity papers as an argument for the toleration of aesthetic difference as the foundation for egalitarian liberty, shedding new light on eighteenth-century aesthetics and politics. At odds with the common image of Bentham as a dehumanizing calculator or an eccentric projector, this innovative study shows Bentham at his most intimate, outraged by injustice and desperate for the end of sanctioned, discriminatory violence.

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