Arguing that Philip Rieff was a Freudian who departed in vital and fascinating ways from Freud, and a committed modern who nevertheless viewed modernity as a disaster, this book makes clear his thought transcends contemporary left-right culture war dichotomies. Alasdair MacIntyre described Rieff's early work as 'a permanently valuable contribution to the human sciences.' The essays in this volume engage with Rieff's teaching, both early and late, across a number of different axes and from a number of disciplinary perspectives, placing him into dialogue with thinkers such as Plato, Nietzsche,…mehr
Arguing that Philip Rieff was a Freudian who departed in vital and fascinating ways from Freud, and a committed modern who nevertheless viewed modernity as a disaster, this book makes clear his thought transcends contemporary left-right culture war dichotomies. Alasdair MacIntyre described Rieff's early work as 'a permanently valuable contribution to the human sciences.' The essays in this volume engage with Rieff's teaching, both early and late, across a number of different axes and from a number of disciplinary perspectives, placing him into dialogue with thinkers such as Plato, Nietzsche, Freud, Weber, Heidegger, Strauss, Pieper, Wilde and more. The Philosophy of Philip Rieff conveys the utility of Rieff's theory for thinking through various contemporary issues, from religion, culture and race, to the role of elites in a democratic society. Philip Rieff's thought offers a key to unlocking the cultural trajectories of late modernity, and this interdisciplinary volume engages that work in its depth and complexity while suggesting Rieff's place in the wider philosophic tradition.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
William G. Batchelder IV is an Associate Professor of History at Waynesburg University, USA. Michael P. Harding is a Professor of Philosophy at Montgomery College, USA.
Inhaltsangabe
1. Editor's Introduction: Of Deathworks and Sacred Orders William G. Batchelder IV (Waynesburg University USA) and Michael P. Harding (Montgomery College USA) Part I: Rieff Philosophy Religion & Metaphysics 2. "You should be closest to him in heart when you resist him": Rieff's Use of Nietzsche in Deathworks" Michael P. Harding (Montgomery College USA) 3. Self-Knowledge After Rieff Christopher Anadale (St Mary's University USA) 4. The Peculiar God of Philip Rieff William G. Batchelder IV (Waynesburg University USA) 5. Democratic Drift and the Therapeutic Deathwork Paul J. Diduch (University of Colorado USA) 6. Rieff Strauss and Heidegger: Sacred Sociology and the Prophecy of a New Social Order Kevin Slack (Hillsdale College USA) Part II: Rieff and Cultural Change 7. Freud Culture and the Function of Political Elites: Philip Rieff on the "Virtuosi of Creation and Decreation." Ethan Alexander-Davey (Campbell University USA) 8. Philip Rieff and the Resistance to Totalitarian Imagination Joshua Bowman (Center for Social Flourishing USA) 9. The Sexual Revolution Sacred Order and Total Revolution: Philip Rieff and Augusto Del Noce on Wilhelm Reich Carl Trueman (Grove City College USA) 10. Philip Rieff's Critique of Oscar Wilde Expressive Individualism and the Religion of the Self Jacob Wolf (Princeton University USA) 11. Philip Rieff and the Politics of the Cold War Yiftach Ofek (University of Chicago USA) 12. Beloved Community and Black Power: An Application of Philip Rieff's Theory to the Divergence of King and Carmichael in Civil Rights History James Patterson (Ave Maria University USA) and William G. Batchelder IV (Waynesburg University USA) 13. Locating the Sacred: Notes Toward a Rieffian Sensibility Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn (Syracuse University USA)
1. Editor's Introduction: Of Deathworks and Sacred Orders William G. Batchelder IV (Waynesburg University USA) and Michael P. Harding (Montgomery College USA) Part I: Rieff Philosophy Religion & Metaphysics 2. "You should be closest to him in heart when you resist him": Rieff's Use of Nietzsche in Deathworks" Michael P. Harding (Montgomery College USA) 3. Self-Knowledge After Rieff Christopher Anadale (St Mary's University USA) 4. The Peculiar God of Philip Rieff William G. Batchelder IV (Waynesburg University USA) 5. Democratic Drift and the Therapeutic Deathwork Paul J. Diduch (University of Colorado USA) 6. Rieff Strauss and Heidegger: Sacred Sociology and the Prophecy of a New Social Order Kevin Slack (Hillsdale College USA) Part II: Rieff and Cultural Change 7. Freud Culture and the Function of Political Elites: Philip Rieff on the "Virtuosi of Creation and Decreation." Ethan Alexander-Davey (Campbell University USA) 8. Philip Rieff and the Resistance to Totalitarian Imagination Joshua Bowman (Center for Social Flourishing USA) 9. The Sexual Revolution Sacred Order and Total Revolution: Philip Rieff and Augusto Del Noce on Wilhelm Reich Carl Trueman (Grove City College USA) 10. Philip Rieff's Critique of Oscar Wilde Expressive Individualism and the Religion of the Self Jacob Wolf (Princeton University USA) 11. Philip Rieff and the Politics of the Cold War Yiftach Ofek (University of Chicago USA) 12. Beloved Community and Black Power: An Application of Philip Rieff's Theory to the Divergence of King and Carmichael in Civil Rights History James Patterson (Ave Maria University USA) and William G. Batchelder IV (Waynesburg University USA) 13. Locating the Sacred: Notes Toward a Rieffian Sensibility Elisabeth Lasch-Quinn (Syracuse University USA)
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