This thesis examines different approaches to cosmopolitanism through a critical lens. It proposes a reconstructed critical cosmopolitanism that incorporates normative concepts from the Kantian tradition as well as perspectives from critical theorists in feminism, postcolonialism, and queer theory.
The thesis focuses on three core components of cosmopolitanism - autonomy, universality, and its anti-nationalist position. It argues that liberal interpretations of autonomy and universality are problematic because they are based on concepts of a stable individual subject and universal values that do not recognize particularity. Nationalism's dependence on marginalizing non-normative groups is also not fully addressed in normative theory.
Through analyzing works by theorists like