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  1. Passion and Paradox: Intellectuals Confront the National Question.Joan Cocks - 2003 - Political Theory 31 (6):896-899.
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  • (2 other versions)Homo sacer.Giorgio Agamben - 1998 - Problemi 1.
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  • Passion and Paradox: Intellectuals Confront the National Question.Joan Cocks - 2002 - Princeton University Press.
    From Kosovo to Québec, Ireland to East Timor, nationalism has been a recurrent topic of intense debate. It has been condemned as a source of hatred and war, yet embraced for stimulating community feeling and collective freedom. Joan Cocks explores the power, danger, and allure of nationalism by examining its place in the thought of eight politically engaged intellectuals of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries: the antagonist of capital, Karl Marx; the critics of imperialism Rosa Luxemburg, Hannah Arendt, and Frantz (...)
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  • Hannah Arendt and the Redemptive Power of Narrative.Seyla Benhabib - 1990 - Social Research: An International Quarterly 57 (1):167-196.
    The article presents information related to Hannah Arendt, who has become one of the most illuminating and certainly one of the most controversial political thinkers of the twentieth century. A tension and a dilemma are at the center of Hannah Arendt's political thought, indicating two formative forces of her spiritual-political identity. Arendt's thinking is decidedly modernist and politically universalist, when she reflects on the political realities of the twentieth century and on the fate of the Jewish people. Hannah Arendt did (...)
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