134420

Continuum, New York

2011

224 Pages

ISBN 9781283015738

Philosophy and the return of violence

Edited by

Nathan Eckstrand

Written at a time when violence has many faces and goes by many names, this collection is proof that philosophy can remain a vital partner in the twin tasks of diagnosis and action. Emerging across specters of genocide, racism, oppression, terror, poverty, or war, the threat of violence is not only concrete and urgent, but all too often throws the work of critical reflection into vulnerable paralysis. With essays by some of today8217;s finest scholars, these pages breathe newlife into the hard work of intellectual engagement. Philosophers such as Peg Birmingham, Robert Bernasconi, and Bernhard Waldenfels not only feel the distinct burden of our age but, with unflagging attention to the philosophical tradition, forge a pronounced counterweight to the violent gyre of today. The result is a stirring critique that looks outward upon the phenomena of injustice, and inward upon the instruments and assumptions of philosophical discourse itself.

Publication details

Full citation:

Eckstrand, N. (ed) (2011). Philosophy and the return of violence, Continuum, New York.

Table of Contents

Strangeness, hospitality, and enmity

Waldenfels Bernhard

89-100

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