Publication: Trazas de la fraternidad
Authors
FARRÉS JUSTE, ORIOL
item.page.secondaryauthor
item.page.director
Publisher
Universidad de Murcia
publication.page.editor
publication.page.department
DOI
https://doi.org/10.6018/daimon/331141
item.page.type
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Description
Abstract
De la triada revolucionaria francesa,
la libertad y la igualdad han recibido mucha
más atención teórica que la fraternidad. El autor
arguye que la fraternidad es una obligación moral
prepolítica y los otros dos principios, en cambio,
son institucionales y políticos. Se argumenta que
la fraternidad es un principio que ahonda en la
igualdad y la libertad y, por lo tanto, activa la
idea de una ciudadanía insurgente que promueve
cambios institucionales para universalizar los
derechos. La fraternidad sería un dispositivo per-
manentemente institucionalizable, pero nunca
institucionalizado; esto es, una fuerza moral que
conduce a la emancipación de los colectivos sub-
alternos.
Among the French revolutionary triad, freedom and equality have received much more attention than fraternity. The author argues that fraternity is a pre-political moral obligation and the other two principles, however, are fully institutional political rights. In this article, it is argued that fraternity is a principle that works to deepen equality and freedom, and thus enables the idea of an insurgent citizenship that promotes institutional changes to universalize rights. Fraternity would be a permanently institutionalizable device, but never institutionalized once and for all; that is, a moral force leading to the emancipation of subaltern, excluded or discriminated groups.
Among the French revolutionary triad, freedom and equality have received much more attention than fraternity. The author argues that fraternity is a pre-political moral obligation and the other two principles, however, are fully institutional political rights. In this article, it is argued that fraternity is a principle that works to deepen equality and freedom, and thus enables the idea of an insurgent citizenship that promotes institutional changes to universalize rights. Fraternity would be a permanently institutionalizable device, but never institutionalized once and for all; that is, a moral force leading to the emancipation of subaltern, excluded or discriminated groups.
publication.page.subject
Citation
item.page.embargo
Collections
Ir a Estadísticas
Sin licencia Creative Commons.