The New Issue of Philosophy and Society (37/1) has been published

This issue of Philosophy and Society features a thematic section entitled ART, MEDIA, AND DEMOCRATIC IMAGINARIES IN THE 2024–2025 PROTESTS IN SERBIA, as well as four original articles on Foucault and the Prisons Information Group, on capabilitarian well-being, on the right of rebellion in the age of digital communication, and finally, on the relationship between EU citizenship and direct democracy.

The New Issue of Philosophy and Society (36/4) has been published

This issue of Philosophy and Society features a thematic section entitled SPIRITUALITY AND CONSCIOUSNESS, as well as six original articles on the relevance of Carlo Rosselli in today’s age, on the concept of “monstrous matter”, on the contribution of philosophy for policy change, on the attitudes of teaching and non-teaching staff towards gender equality in Serbia, on Hardt and Negri’s political ontology, and finally, on education under neoliberalism in the case of Chile.

The New Issue of Philosophy and Society (36/3) has been published

This issue of Philosophy and Society features a thematic section entitled REVISITING THE POLITICS OF TRANSLATION: TRANSLATION, NATION AND GENDER, as well as four original articles on the politics of literature in Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s work, the image of the mother-peacemaker in the USSR, on the interference over polities, and finally, on metaphysical structures in Jonathan Schaffer’s work.

The New Issue of Philosophy and Society (36/1) has been published

This issue of Philosophy and Society features a thematic section entitled RESILIENCE AND/OR VULNERABILITY OF THE CIVIL SPHERE, as well as original articles on Hegel’s philosophy and its relation to art, postmodernism, and metamodernism, and authors such as Lyotard, Lacan, Bataille, Derrida, and Laclau. Moreover, this issue includes a review of Alessandro Ferrara’s book, Sovereignty Across Generations: Constituent Power and Political Liberalism.

The New Issue of Philosophy and Society (35/4) has been published

This issue includes a thematic section titled Invention and the Impossible: Twenty Years of Deconstruction With and Without Jacques Derrida, as well as three original research papers on the relationship between neoliberalism and “therapeutic culture,” normative decision theory, and the paradox of the rational voter. Additionally, it features a review of Patrick Gamsby’s book titled Henri Lefebvre, Boredom, and Everyday Life.

The Journal Philosophy and Society Launched Online First Publishing

We are pleased to announce that the journal Philosophy and Society has successfully implemented an Online First publishing system, allowing articles scheduled for publication in upcoming issues to be available on our website ahead of their print release.  This development reflects the journal’s commitment to fostering timely and broader dissemination of scholarly work. Philosophy and…