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OverviewIn an unconventionally written book that challenges the literary imagination of its readers, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer explores how wonder is central to Martha C. Nussbaum’s normative project. Nussbaum’s work is opposed to the emotional and political conditions of ‘narcissism’ – the tendency to seek to control the wills of others in order to defend oneself against perceived vulnerabilities. Our capacity for wondering is important for growing beyond narcissism. Bendik-Keymer elaborates a politics of wonder that is consistent with understanding this idea. Taking issue with understandings of wonder viewing it as an emotion of surprise or delight, he develops an alternate tradition finding wonder in concert with the freedom of imagination found by degrees within much of human understanding. The result is a constructive rereading of Nussbaum’s oeuvre, surprising for how it disencumbers her work of some falsehoods surrounding anxiety and anger and for the ways it implies an egalitarian politics of relational autonomy more socialist than liberal. Misty Morrison’s visual inquiry accompanies the book creating space for the reader to wonder. Morrison paints and prints how families involve wonder, starting with moments in her child’s life when she wonders what they might see. Nussbaum’s Politics of Wonder is an important contribution to the philosophy of wonder and is crucial for understanding the work of a leading philosopher. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Professor Jeremy Bendik-Keymer (Case Western Reserve University, USA) , Misty MorrisonPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.454kg ISBN: 9781350293618ISBN 10: 135029361 Pages: 240 Publication Date: 25 July 2024 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsReviews"""A very timely call for the revival of politics through our ability to wonder, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer's book proves that philosophy should have a robust place in public life."" --Urszula Lisowska, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, The University of Wroclaw, Poland ""Nussbaum's Politics of Wonder is the first book to notice and develop the crucial importance of wonder to Nussbaum's political philosophy. At one stroke, it makes an important contribution to Nussbaum scholarship and a novel contribution to the ongoing recovery of the political importance of wonder."" --Anders Schinkel, Associate Professor of Philosophy of Education, VU Amsterdam, The Netherlands ""In an individual voice, but with a wide range of reference that includes literature, music, and film, Bendik-Keymer has more than vindicated Plato's saying that philosophy begins in wonder. He explores what wonder means, why it should inform our lives, and how it can inspire a new vision of politics."" --Charles Larmore, Professor of Philosophy, Brown University, USA" Provides a remarkable phenomenology of the polyphonic gist of wondering, consisting of four mutually related motets (essays) on different aspects of wondering’s genealogy ... Inspiring and thought-provoking. * Silvija Serafimova, Journal of Ethical Studies * A very timely call for the revival of politics through our ability to wonder, Jeremy Bendik-Keymer’s book proves that philosophy should have a robust place in public life. * Urszula Lisowska, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, The University of Wroclaw, Poland * Nussbaum’s Politics of Wonder is the first book to notice and develop the crucial importance of wonder to Nussbaum’s political philosophy. At one stroke, it makes an important contribution to Nussbaum scholarship and a novel contribution to the ongoing recovery of the political importance of wonder. * Anders Schinkel, Associate Professor of Philosophy of Education, VU Amsterdam, The Netherlands * In an individual voice, but with a wide range of reference that includes literature, music, and film, Bendik-Keymer has more than vindicated Plato's saying that philosophy begins in wonder. He explores what wonder means, why it should inform our lives, and how it can inspire a new vision of politics. * Charles Larmore, Professor of Philosophy, Brown University, USA * Author InformationJeremy Bendik-Keymer is Professor of Philosophy at Case Western Reserve University, USA. He authored The Ecological Life: Discovering Citizenship and a Sense of Humanity (2006), contributed to We Are All Explorers: Learning and Teaching with Reggio Principles in Urban Settings (2008), co-edited Ethical Adaptation to Climate Change: Human Virtues of the Future (2012), and recently wrote several books of literary philosophy. Misty Morrison is a figurative painter and printmaker. Her lithography is in the Ohio University Permanent Collection. Recent shows include Oblivion and The Family System I (“I ain’t got no home in this world anymore”). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |