'Di Cesare's limpid meditations on the tormented relations between thought and power make a passionate case for philosophy as a liminal practice looking both ways across the limits of the political. Her figure of the philosopher as the foreigner, refugee and outsider attentive to the calls of the other and speaking in the name of an anarchic justice proposes no less than a renewal of the political vocation of philosophy for the twenty-first century.'
Howard Caygill, Professor of Modern European Philosophy at Kingston University, London
1. The saturated Immanence of the World
2. Heraclitus, wakefulness and the original communism
3. The narcosis of light: on the night of capital
4. The polis: a calling
5. Wonder - a troubled passion
6. Between heavens and abysses
7. Socrates's atopia
8. A political death
9. Plato - when philosophy headed into exile within the city
10. Migrants of thought
11. 'What is philosophy?'
12. Radical questions
13. The out-of-place of metaphysics
14. Dissent and critique
15. The twentieth century: breaks and traumas
16. After Heidegger
17. Against negotiators and normative philosophers
18. Ancilla democratiae: a dejected return
19. The poetry of clarity
20. Potent prophesies of the leap: Marx and Kierkegaard
21. The ecstasy of existence
22. For an exophilia
23. The philosophy of awakening
24. Fallen angels and rag-pickers
25. Anarchist postscript
Notes
Bibliography Index
Donatella Di Cesare is Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at the Sapienza University of Rome.