Phenomenology of Plurality: Hannah Arendt on Political Intersubjectivity

Author:   Sophie Loidolt ,  Komarine Romdenh-Romluc ,  David Cerbone
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367887575


Pages:   290
Publication Date:   10 December 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Phenomenology of Plurality: Hannah Arendt on Political Intersubjectivity


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Author:   Sophie Loidolt ,  Komarine Romdenh-Romluc ,  David Cerbone
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9780367887575


ISBN 10:   0367887576
Pages:   290
Publication Date:   10 December 2019
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

"Introduction Part I: Transforming Phenomenology: Plurality and the Political 1 The Emergence of Plurality 2 Pluralizing and Politicizing Basic Phenomenological Concepts 3 Arendt’s Phenomenological Methodology Part II: Actualizing Plurality: The We, the Other, and the Self in Political Intersubjectivity 4 Plurality as Political Intersubjectivity 5 Actualizing a Plural ""We"" 6 A Political Ethics of Actualized Plurality Conclusion"

Reviews

Sophie Loidolt's book is timely and impressive . . . [It] is a great example of reconstructive critical interpretation that challenges prevailing interpretations and develops anew Arendt's phenomenological approach to political intersubjectivity . . . Loidolt's book offers one of the most original and compelling interpretations of Arendt's philosophical thinking in recent decades. Readers approaching it in a philosophical spirit will be rewarded with a rich understanding of Arendt's work as a political phenomenology that can still teach us much about the 'human condition' today. - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Sophie Loidolt's Phenomenology of Plurality marks an innovative and timely contribution. The book not only provides a fresh understanding of Arendt's concepts of subjectivity, intersubjectivity and a political form of the 'we, ' which escape the prevalent perspectives within contemporary political theory. It also shows how Arendt's phenomenology of plurality rethinks the main presuppositions of the phenomenological tradition itself, enriching it with a distinctly political perspective on intersubjectivity and action. - Arendt Studies A book analyzing Hannah Arendt's phenomenological background thoroughly is long overdue . . . Many texts within Arendt-scholarship simply adopt Arendt's language--often full of beautiful and meaningful expressions--without supplying a deeper analysis of its content and context. This is not the case with Sophie Loidolt's book. She does not just 'talk the talk', she also delves deep into the meaning of Arendt's language. Loidolt's expertise in phenomenology allows her to achieve this goal, which also contributes to the achievement of her broader aim to familiarize both phenomenologists with Arendt and Arendtian scholars with foundations of phenomenology . . . Due to its comprehensiveness and the depth of Loidolt's analysis, the book has great potential, not only to inspire a new, phenomenologically-oriented appreciation of Arendt's work but also to become a crucial contribution to Arendt scholarship. - Phenomenological Reviews


Sophie Loidolt's book is timely and impressive . . . [It] is a great example of reconstructive critical interpretation that challenges prevailing interpretations and develops anew Arendt's phenomenological approach to political intersubjectivity . . . Loidolt's book offers one of the most original and compelling interpretations of Arendt's philosophical thinking in recent decades. Readers approaching it in a philosophical spirit will be rewarded with a rich understanding of Arendt's work as a political phenomenology that can still teach us much about the 'human condition' today. - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Sophie Loidolt's Phenomenology of Plurality marks an innovative and timely contribution. The book not only provides a fresh understanding of Arendt's concepts of subjectivity, intersubjectivity and a political form of the 'we,' which escape the prevalent perspectives within contemporary political theory. It also shows how Arendt's phenomenology of plurality rethinks the main presuppositions of the phenomenological tradition itself, enriching it with a distinctly political perspective on intersubjectivity and action. - Arendt Studies A book analyzing Hannah Arendt's phenomenological background thoroughly is long overdue . . . Many texts within Arendt-scholarship simply adopt Arendt's language-often full of beautiful and meaningful expressions-without supplying a deeper analysis of its content and context. This is not the case with Sophie Loidolt's book. She does not just 'talk the talk', she also delves deep into the meaning of Arendt's language. Loidolt's expertise in phenomenology allows her to achieve this goal, which also contributes to the achievement of her broader aim to familiarize both phenomenologists with Arendt and Arendtian scholars with foundations of phenomenology . . . Due to its comprehensiveness and the depth of Loidolt's analysis, the book has great potential, not only to inspire a new, phenomenologically-oriented appreciation of Arendt's work but also to become a crucial contribution to Arendt scholarship. - Phenomenological Reviews Loidolt's work authoritatively reinstates Arendt as a central figure in the phenom- enological tradition . . . It is Loidolt, not Arendt, who is laying the foundation for the future work of political phenomenologists by presenting us with the novel idea of a phenomenology of plurality . This promising idea is Loidolt's central and most interesting contribution. It may potentially revolutionize the way phenomenology will be practiced. - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences This impressive study is the first systematic and comprehensive reconstruction of Hannah Arendt's phenomenology ever pursued . . . Loidolt's readings of Arendt (and other phenomenologists) are rigorous and of unsurpassed analytic depth . . . After reading this book, nobody should doubt any longer that Arendt's work and method belong to phenomenology, and, what's more, how she enriched it with a political vocabulary and a method that fits actualized plurality. - Hypatia Loidolt succeeds in providing an introduction to Arendt for phenomenologists and an intro- duction to phenomenology for Arendt scholars, and in making explicit many ideas implicit in her work. Most importantly, by showing the oscillations in Arendt's thought, in pointing out certain arguments as unsound and reformulating certain aspects of her theory, Loidolt opens the door for further work in political phenomenology. - Philosophy in Review


Sophie Loidolt's book is timely and impressive . . . [It] is a great example of reconstructive critical interpretation that challenges prevailing interpretations and develops anew Arendt's phenomenological approach to political intersubjectivity . . . Loidolt's book offers one of the most original and compelling interpretations of Arendt's philosophical thinking in recent decades. Readers approaching it in a philosophical spirit will be rewarded with a rich understanding of Arendt's work as a political phenomenology that can still teach us much about the 'human condition' today. - Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews Sophie Loidolt's Phenomenology of Plurality marks an innovative and timely contribution. The book not only provides a fresh understanding of Arendt's concepts of subjectivity, intersubjectivity and a political form of the 'we,' which escape the prevalent perspectives within contemporary political theory. It also shows how Arendt's phenomenology of plurality rethinks the main presuppositions of the phenomenological tradition itself, enriching it with a distinctly political perspective on intersubjectivity and action. - Arendt Studies A book analyzing Hannah Arendt's phenomenological background thoroughly is long overdue . . . Many texts within Arendt-scholarship simply adopt Arendt's language-often full of beautiful and meaningful expressions-without supplying a deeper analysis of its content and context. This is not the case with Sophie Loidolt's book. She does not just 'talk the talk', she also delves deep into the meaning of Arendt's language. Loidolt's expertise in phenomenology allows her to achieve this goal, which also contributes to the achievement of her broader aim to familiarize both phenomenologists with Arendt and Arendtian scholars with foundations of phenomenology . . . Due to its comprehensiveness and the depth of Loidolt's analysis, the book has great potential, not only to inspire a new, phenomenologically-oriented appreciation of Arendt's work but also to become a crucial contribution to Arendt scholarship. - Phenomenological Reviews Loidolt's work authoritatively reinstates Arendt as a central figure in the phenom- enological tradition . . . It is Loidolt, not Arendt, who is laying the foundation for the future work of political phenomenologists by presenting us with the novel idea of a phenomenology of plurality . This promising idea is Loidolt's central and most interesting contribution. It may potentially revolutionize the way phenomenology will be practiced. - Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences This impressive study is the first systematic and comprehensive reconstruction of Hannah Arendt's phenomenology ever pursued . . . Loidolt's readings of Arendt (and other phenomenologists) are rigorous and of unsurpassed analytic depth . . . After reading this book, nobody should doubt any longer that Arendt's work and method belong to phenomenology, and, what's more, how she enriched it with a political vocabulary and a method that fits actualized plurality. - Hypatia Loidolt succeeds in providing an introduction to Arendt for phenomenologists and an intro- duction to phenomenology for Arendt scholars, and in making explicit many ideas implicit in her work. Most importantly, by showing the oscillations in Arendt's thought, in pointing out certain arguments as unsound and reformulating certain aspects of her theory, Loidolt opens the door for further work in political phenomenology. - Philosophy in Review


Author Information

"Sophie Loidolt is Professor at the Philosophy Department of TU Darmstadt, Germany, and a member of the ""Young Academy"" of the Austrian Academy of Sciences. Her books include Anspruch und Rechtfertigung. Eine Theorie des rechtlichen Denkens im Anschluss an die Phänomenologie Edmund Husserls (2009) and Einführung in die Rechtsphänomenologie (2010)."

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