FreshRSS

๐Ÿ”’
โŒ About FreshRSS
There are new available articles, click to refresh the page.
Before yesterdayYour RSS feeds

Martha Nussbaum and Politics; Hannah Arendt and Politics โ€“ Edinburgh University Press, January 2023

Brandon Robshaw, Martha Nussbaum and Politics โ€“ Edinburgh University Press, January 2023

Providing an overview of the political and ethical philosophy of Martha Nussbaum, this book presents the ideas of this significant philosopher and shows how her thought, while rooted in the traditions of classical philosophy, illuminates a number of current, controversial issues. The book takes a chronological approach and aims to show how Nussbaumโ€™s thought has continually grown and developed. It takes the reader through her views on ethics, political philosophy, feminism and womenโ€™s rights, LGBT issues, animal rights, religious tolerance and accommodation, contemporary politics, and global justice. It also explores contested areas of her thought, such as the extent to which she is a perfectionist liberal, challenges to her view that religion merits special accommodations, utilitarian objections to the capabilities approach, criticisms of her brand of liberal feminism, and cosmopolitan objections to her nation-state-based liberal conception of global justice. Each chapter focuses on a book from a different stage of her career, starting with her first book,ย The Fragility of Goodnessย and ending with her most recent,ย The Cosmopolitan Tradition.

Maria Robaszkiewicz,ย Michael Weinman, Hannah Arendt and Politics โ€“ Edinburgh University Press, January 2023

Hannah Arendt has been classified as a critical theorist, a phenomenologist, an anti-feminist, a feminist ally, a democratic theorist, a republican theorist, a Heidegerrian, and a nostalgic Hellenophile. This book responds to these perspectives in two ways. First, we recognize that one can legitimately derive all these positionings from one or another of her writings; second, we insist nevertheless and precisely because all these approaches play some role in her work that her readers ought to follow her own claim that she โ€˜does not belong to any clubโ€™. Instead, we introduce her works as exercises in political thinking, treating her as a dialogue partner, whose judgments and opinions remain open for reflection and discussion.

stuartelden

โŒ