Articles

Of Powerful Particulars and Contingent Universals: Freedom, Feminism and Engaged Universalism

Bansal, Manhar

Using Anna Tsing’s much acclaimed monograph Friction: An Ethnography of Global Connection (2005), I attempt to sketch out a framework of “engaged universalism” in this essay. In opposition to the usual celebration of the universal as a powerful force, I argue that a theory of engaged universalism must simultaneously view the particular as powerful and the universal as contingent. Drawing on debates around area studies, cultural relativism, and transnational feminism, I explore the universal category of “Freedom”—understood in its liberal, emancipatory, Western formulation—to assert that every universal is, in the ultimate analysis, a particular. This acknowledgment opens up possibilities for the rearticulation of categories that currently “speak in the name of the universal” but are always already contingent.

Files

  • thumbnail for 10.52214|cja.v2i1.11115 - 111155544.pdf 10.52214|cja.v2i1.11115 - 111155544.pdf application/pdf 210 KB Download File

Also Published In

More About This Work

Published Here
May 23, 2025