Citizens in the contemporary world have become alienated from politics because they conceive of it as an instrumental activity. David Antonini argues that Hannah Arendt's thought can help us recover meaningful political experience: a distinct experience of politics in which citizens can speak and act together.
Citizens in the contemporary world have become alienated from politics because they conceive of it as an instrumental activity. David Antonini argues that Hannah Arendt's thought can help us recover meaningful political experience: a distinct experience of politics in which citizens can speak and act together.
David Antonini is lecturer in philosophy at Clemson University.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction Chapter 1: Modernity and the Need of Political Experience Chapter 2: Arendt's Phenomenological Concept of Action: Part I Chapter 3: Arendt's Phenomenological Concept of Action: Part II Chapter 4: Arendt's Political Concept of Action, Part I: Revolution Chapter 5: Arendt's Political Concept of Action, Part II: Civil Disobedience Chapter 6: Political Speech as Horizontal Political Experience: Judgment and Opinion Formation Conclusion Bibliography
Introduction Chapter 1: Modernity and the Need of Political Experience Chapter 2: Arendt's Phenomenological Concept of Action: Part I Chapter 3: Arendt's Phenomenological Concept of Action: Part II Chapter 4: Arendt's Political Concept of Action, Part I: Revolution Chapter 5: Arendt's Political Concept of Action, Part II: Civil Disobedience Chapter 6: Political Speech as Horizontal Political Experience: Judgment and Opinion Formation Conclusion Bibliography
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