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  1. (1 other version)Hannah Arendt e a modernidade: esquecimento e redescoberta da política.André Duarte - 2001 - Trans/Form/Ação 24 (1):249-272.
    Para Hannah Arendt, a modernidade configura um período histórico de obscurecimento das determinações políticas democráticas, pois, onde a política não foi reduzida ao plano da violência, como no caso dos fenômenos totalitários, ela foi reduzida ao plano da administração burocrática dos interesses econômicos da sociedade. Neste artigo, pretendo discutir a constituição argumentativa desse diagnóstico, referindo-o à sua raiz de inspiração, isto é, as críticas de Nietzsche e Heidegger à modernidade. Finalmente, procuro demonstrar que Arendt não se limitou a uma concepção (...)
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  • Conscience, morality and judgment: An inquiry into the subjective basis of human rights.Serena Parekh - 2008 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 34 (1-2):177-195.
    This paper is an exploration of the role of conscience in the justification of human rights. I argue that in both the western tradition of natural rights and the non-western traditions, human rights are justified, in part, because of their appeal to conscience, and not simply because they issue from a divine source or are based on reason. In contrast, contemporary justifications of human rights primarily look for an objective foundation or simply assert the pragmatic importance of human rights as (...)
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  • ‘Exploding the Limits of Law’: Judgment and Freedom in Arendt and Adorno.Craig Reeves - 2009 - Res Publica 15 (2):137-164.
    In Eichmann in Jerusalem , Hannah Arendt struggled to defend the possibility of judgment against the obvious problems encountered in attempts to offer legally valid and morally meaningful judgments of those who had committed crimes in morally bankrupt communities. Following Norrie, this article argues that Arendt’s conclusions in Eichmann are equivocal and incoherent. Exploring her perspectival theory of judgment, the article suggests that Arendt remains trapped within certain Kantian assumptions in her philosophy of history, and as such sees the question (...)
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  • Introduction to the Special Issue, People on Streets. Critical Phenomenologies of Embodied Resistance.Maria Robaszkiewicz & Marieke Borren - 2023 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 55 (1):5-11.
    The last few years have seen the emergence of critical phenomenology as an exciting paradigm in phenomenology and beyond, spanning disciplines such as anthropology, urban studies, gender studies an...
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  • Hermeneutic Responsibility in Political Judgement. Retrieving Factual Truth From Direct Interaction.Eveline Cioflec - 2022 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia 67 (3):113-134.
    "In this paper I am arguing for hermeneutic responsibility in political judgment, as it can be attributed to Arendt’s work. Political judgment is reflective judgment relying on representation by imagination and therefore only has exemplary validity. Along the line of Arendt’s Lectures on Kant’s Political Philosophy I point out her argument for a different generality in politics than the generality of concepts. This generality of political judgment always refers back to the particular. Only by this reference to the particular, namely (...)
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  • Arendt, Améry, and the Phenomenology of Evil.Sidra Shahid - 2022 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 53 (4):469-487.
    Contemporary accounts of evil attempt to identify features or properties that transform an act of wrongdoing into an act of evil. What is missing from the discussion, however, is a phenomenology of evil that engages with the standpoint of the subject that undergoes evil. This paper discusses basic themes for a phenomenology of evil through a critical comparison between Hannah Arendt and Jean Améry’s respective conceptions of evil. Central for this discussion is a claim Arendt and Améry share: evil destroys (...)
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  • Visiting exemplars. An Arendtian exploration of educational judgement.Morten Timmermann Korsgaard - 2020 - Ethics and Education 15 (2):247-259.
    ABSTRACTThe role of exemplification and exemplars is receiving increasing attention in educational theory. Usually, this is connected to emulation models in character and moral education. Exemplars in this framework are those who show us how to act and what to do, and inspire us emotionally to improve. In Hannah Arendt’s unfinished work on judgement, the exemplar plays a different role. Instead of functioning as an inspiration for behavioural change, the exemplar inspires thinking. In Men in Dark Times and the lecture (...)
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  • Infinity and Finality. Hannah Arendt in Retrospect.Frederick Barnard - 1995 - Deutsche Vierteljahrsschrift für Literaturwissenschaft Und Geistesgeschichte 69 (3):546-569.
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  • (1 other version)Arendt and political realism: towards a realist account of political judgement.Gisli Vogler & Demetris Tillyris - 2021 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 24 (6):821-844.
    This article argues that Hannah Arendt’s thought can offer significant insights on political judgement for realism in political theory. We identify a realist position which emphasises the need to account for how humans judge politically, contra moralist tendencies to limit its exercise to rational standards, but which fails to provide a sufficient conception of its structure and potential. Limited appeals to political judgement render the realist defence of the political elusive and compromise the endeavour to offer a meaningful alternative to (...)
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  • (1 other version)Framing and reframing R2P—a responsibility to protect humanity from evil.Christof Royer - 2018 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy:1-24.
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  • ‘Reflections on Little Rock’ and Reflective Judgment.Franco Palazzi - 2017 - Philosophical Papers 46 (3):389-441.
    Reflections on Little Rock is one of Hannah Arendt’s most controversial writings. Read from the perspective of the political philosopher, it appears even more contentious than her famous remarks in Eichmann in Jerusalem. In the last two decades, a number of critical contributions have been published addressing this essay, highlighting how it casts serious doubts on the correctness of Arendt’s dealing with the racial question and, more generally, on the tenability of central elements of her political thought – e.g., her (...)
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  • Ethics, politics and the transformative possibilities of the self in Hannah Arendt and Michel Foucault.Lenka Ucnik - 2018 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 44 (2):200-225.
    A wave of interest in Hannah Arendt and Michel Foucault as bio-political thinkers was initiated by publication of Giorgio Agamben’s Homo Sacer. The intellectual connection of these two figures is, however, broader than their bio-political considerations. Arendt and Foucault both offer detailed accounts of an ethico-political self. Both Arendt’s and Foucault’s later work explores the meaning of living ethically and politically. By examining the relationship between self, ethics and politics, I suggest there are two general points of convergence in Arendt (...)
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  • ‘A Sense of the World’: Hannah Arendt’s Hermeneutic Phenomenology of Common Sense.Marieke Borren - 2013 - International Journal of Philosophical Studies 21 (2):225 - 255.
    (2013). ‘A Sense of the World’: Hannah Arendt’s Hermeneutic Phenomenology of Common Sense. International Journal of Philosophical Studies. ???aop.label???. doi: 10.1080/09672559.2012.743156.
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  • Thinking with and Against Arendt About Race, Racism, and Anti-Racism - Beyond Origins and “Reflections”.Michael Weinman - 2023 - Arendt Studies 6:75-87.
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  • The Grey Zones of Violence in Political Resistance.Tal Correm - 2020 - Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 67 (165):10-36.
    This article addresses the ambivalent role of violence in liberation struggles by staging a mutually enriching dialogue between Hannah Arendt and Frantz Fanon. It challenges the binary distinction between justifiable resistance that allows for only short-term, instrumental use of violence, and unwarranted resistance where violence is intrinsically justified as a creative, organic life-force of the oppressed. Instead, it discusses the constitutive role of violence as a condition of possibility of politics – highlighting the impossibility of separating the bloody moments of (...)
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  • (1 other version)Framing and reframing R2P—a responsibility to protect humanity from evil.Christof Royer - 2020 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 23 (6):659-682.
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  • Reclaiming the Public Space: Critical Phenomenology of Women’s Revolutions in Dark Times.Maria Robaszkiewicz - 2023 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 55 (1):44-60.
    In this paper, I focus on feminist protests (exemplary, in Argentina and Poland) defending women's right to access to prenatal diagnostics and abortion, which I reflect upon from the perspective of Hannah Arendt's theory of politics. After briefly referring to Arendt's difficult relationship with feminism, linking it to the struggle of Argentinian women for legalizing abortion, I look at Arendt's theorizing of the body in and beyond the private. I then argue for politicization of abortion as extrinsically enforced and rethink (...)
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  • Unpredictable yet Guided: Arendt on Principled Action.Wolfhart Totschnig - 2019 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 50 (3):189-207.
    Political action is unpredictable because it unfolds among a plurality of independent actors. This unpredictability generates a fundamental puzzle: If an actor cannot know where her initiative will lead, what motivates and guides her in her doings? The aim of this paper is to develop and defend the solution to the puzzle that we can find in the thought of Hannah Arendt, namely the idea that political action is – or should be – motivated and guided by principles, principles like (...)
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  • Toward a Return to Plurality in Arendtian Judgment.Jack E. Marsh Jr - 2008 - Kritike 2 (2):95-111.
    Without further ado: the perplexities surrounding the relation of Arendt’s early and late theories of judgment are rooted in her singular commitment to the abiding yet fragile possibility of human freedom. These perplexities are not a function of the theoretical faux paux conventionally ascribed to her by well meaning interpreters and sympathetic critics. Indeed, her work exhibits an admirable, if scandalous, refusal to be reduced to the imperatives of an overdetermined moral-theoretical field, an impertinence I hope to honor in this (...)
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  • Arendt and social change in democracies.Neve Gordon - 2001 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 4 (2):85-111.
    This article explores Hannah Arendt's insights into the forms of social control operating especially in democracies, together with the possibility of resistance to such control. Since the way in which one defines freedom informs one's understanding of the techniques that suppress, regulate, and modify behaviour, the article begins by sketching Arendt's notion of freedom, and compares this to its liberal counterpart. That discussion leads to Arendt's conception of power, whose corollary is freedom, and whose suppression amounts to control. The institutional (...)
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  • Hannah Arendt: The risks of the public realm.Elizabeth Frazer - 2009 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 12 (2):203-223.
    In this paper I evaluate the theoretical and normative validity of Arendt's idea of a public sphere. My discussion is organised under three related headings. First, an exploration of the theme of ‘plurality’ in Arendt's work. This is connected, second, with a distinctive account of the role of ‘representation’ in political life. Third, the relation between ethics and politics, and the particular normativity of Arendt's concept of politics. Finally, I go on to a consideration of how Arendt's scheme of plurality (...)
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  • (1 other version)Arendt and political realism: towards a realist account of political judgement.Gisli Vogler & Demetris Tillyris - 2021 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 24 (6):821-844.
    This article argues that Hannah Arendt’s thought can offer significant insights on political judgement for realism in political theory. We identify a realist position which emphasises the need to account for how humans judge politically, contra moralist tendencies to limit its exercise to rational standards, but which fails to provide a sufficient conception of its structure and potential. Limited appeals to political judgement render the realist defence of the political elusive and compromise the endeavour to offer a meaningful alternative to (...)
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  • Political Theory and Political Ethics in the Work of Hannah Arendt.Steve Buckler - 2007 - Contemporary Political Theory 6 (4):461-483.
    The paper seeks to show that there is a distinctive and consistent method in the political thought of Hannah Arendt. It is argued that this method constitutes a salutary and potentially challenging alternative to conventional approaches in contemporary political theory. In contrast with approaches that adopt an unfortunately abstracted standpoint, resulting from the insistence that political theory answer formally to the requirements of philosophy, Arendt adopts a more mediated and phenomenologically sensitive standpoint. Rejecting influential attributions to Arendt of a method (...)
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