“I have treasured Richard Rorty’s witty, urbane, and generous voice since first encountering his writings in the late 1980s. He was the first philosopher whose thinking really changed my mind, and it stayed changed. I missed his voice in the turbulent events of the past several years, but this inspiring collection of his political essays reminds us how prescient and humane Rorty's thinking was, and how relevant it still is.”—Brian Eno“In our dark times, if you admit the country and the species are in a bad way, but do not yet think we’re doomed, you will find a bracing plea for hope in these unfamiliar, fugitive essays of the late Richard Rorty. His voice remains one we all still need to hear.”—Robert B. Westbrook, author of Democratic Hope: Pragmatism and the Politics of Truth“What Can We Hope For? reveals a Rorty who’s rather more militant and less nonchalant than the one we’re used to. Many of his observations—about the state of universities, the Right and the Left, culture and economics, critique and practical politics—seem more timely than ever. Blunt, mordant, remarkably prescient, Rorty is always worth reading.”—Rita Felski, University of Virginia
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