"The present volume ... (starts) with Fraser's 1995 essay and (ends) with a 2007 exchange ..."--Page 4.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Adding insult to injury: an introduction / Kevin Olson -- I: Redistribution or recognition? A false antithesis -- from redistribution to recognition? dilemmas of justice in a "postsocialist" age / Nancy Fraser -- merely cultural / Judith Butler -- heterosexism, misrecognition, and capitalism: a response to Judith Butler / Nancy Fraser -- is "cultural recognition" a useful notion for leftists politics? Richard Rorty -- why overcoming prejudice is not enough: a rejoinder to Richard Rorty / Nancy Fraser -- unruly categories: a critique of Nancy Fraser's dual systems theory / Iris Marion Young -- against Pollyanna-ism: a replt to Iris Young / Nancy Fraser -- from inequality to difference: a severe case of displacement / Anne Phillips
II: Reconciling redistribution and recognition: justice in two dimensions -- rethinking recognition: overcoming displacement and reification in cultural politics / Nancy Fraser -- arguing over participatory parity: on Nancy Fraser's conception of social justice / Christopher F. Zurn -- affirmative action and Fraser's redistribution-recognition dilemma / Elizabeth Anderson -- is Nancy Fraser's critique of theories of distributive justice justified? / Ingrid Robeyns -- resource egalitarianism and the politics of recognition / Joseph Heath
III: Bringing the political back in: a third dimension of justice? -- status injustice: the role of the state / Leonard Feldman -- particiaptory parity and democratic justice / kevin Olson -- reframing justice in a globalizing world / Nancy Fraser -- IV: Philosophical foundations: recognition, justice, critique -- struggling over the meaning of recognition / Nikolas Kompridis -- first things first: redistribution, recognition and justification / Rainer Forst -- prioritizing justice as participatory parity: a reply to Kompridis and Forst / Nancy Fraser.
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Historically, leftwing accounts of injustice focussed primarily on economic harms, such as poverty, exploitation, and inequality. Recently, however, with the collapse of Communism and the rise of identity politics, attention has turned toward cultural harms, such as cultural imperialism, 'misrecognition,' and disrespect. New challenges for the left are raised: How to do justice to the legitimate claims of multiculturalism without abandoning the left's historic-and still indispensable-commitment to economic equality? How to broaden the understanding of injustice by adding (cultural) insult to (economic) injury? Adding Insult to Injury traces the debate sparked by Nancy Fraser's controversial effort to combine the social politics of equality and the cultural politics of difference, while probing the tensions between them.