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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Acknowledgments
Thinking Politically: An Introduction
Part One: Classical Political Thought
Introduction
1. Thucydides: From The Peloponnesian War
2. Plato: Selections
3. Aristotle: Politics
4. Cicero: On The Republic and The Laws
Part Two: The Middle Ages
Introduction
5. St. Augustine: City of God
6. St. Thomas Aquinas: Politics and Law
7. Christine de Pizan: The Book of the City of Ladies
Part Three: Modern Political Thought
Introduction
8. Niccolò Machiavelli: The Prince and Discourses (Selections)
9. Martin Luther: The Christian in Society
10. John Calvin: God, Politics, Duty
11. Thomas Hobbes: Leviathan
12. Baruch Spinoza: Theological-Political Treatise
13. John Locke: Second Treatise of Government
14. Jonathan Swift: A Modest Proposal
15. Montesquieu: The Spirit of the Laws
16. David Hume: Empirical Politics
17. Jean-Jacques Rousseau: The People’s Will, Sovereignty, and Inequality
18. Adam Smith: The Wealth of Nations
19. Thomas Jefferson et al.: The Declaration of Independence
20. Publius and Brutus: Federalists and Anti-Federalists
21. Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen
22. Edmund Burke: Reflections on the Revolution in France
23. Marie-Olympes de Gouges: Declaration of the Rights of Women and Citizens
24. Mary Wollstonecraft: A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
25. Immanuel Kant: What Is Enlightenment?
26. G.W.F. Hegel: Lordship and Bondage
27. Jeremy Bentham: An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation
28. John Stuart Mill: Liberty and the Individual
29. Alexis de Tocqueville: Democracy in America
30. Frederick Douglass: What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?
31. Abraham Lincoln: The Gettysburg Address
32. Karl Marx: Revolution against Capitalism
33. Friedrich Nietzsche: On the Genealogy of Morals
Part Four: Century of Turmoil
Introduction
34. V. I. Lenin: Bolshevism
35. Gaetano Mosca: The Ruling Class
36. Robert Michels: Political Parties
37. Max Weber: Politics as a Vocation
38. Emma Goldman: Victims of Morality
39. Sigmund Freud: Civilization and Its Discontents
40. Albert Einstein and Sigmund Freud: Why War?
41. Benito Mussolini: Fascism
42. Hannah Arendt: The Origins of Totalitarianism
43. F. A. Hayek: The Road to Serfdom
44. John Dewey: Creative Democracy—The Task Before Us
45. Franklin D. Roosevelt: Liberal America
46. T. H. Marshall: Citizenship and Social Class
47. George Orwell: Politics and the English Language
48. Leo Strauss: What Is Political Philosophy?
49. Simone de Beauvoir: The Second Sex
50. Frantz Fanon: The Wretched of the Earth
51. Martin Luther King, Jr.: Letter from Birmingham Jail
52. Malcolm X: The Ballot or the Bullet
53. Václav Havel: The Power of the Powerless
54. Francis Fukuyama: The End of History?
55. Mitchell Cohen: 1989: What Is to Be Learned?
Part Five: Changing Horizons
Introduction
56. Jürgen Habermas: The Public Sphere
57. Michel Foucault: Power: An Interview
58. Peter Singer: Famine, Affluence, and Morality
59. John Rawls: A Theory of Justice
60. Robert Nozick: Anarchy, State, and Utopia
61. Michael Walzer: In Defense of Equality
62. Iris Marion Young: Justice and the Politics of Difference
63. Martha Nussbaum: Patriotism and Cosmopolitanism
64. Amartya Sen: The Idea of Justice
65. Jan-Werner Müller: What Is Populism?
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