Public Space and Political Experience: An Arendtian Interpretation

Public Space and Political Experience: An Arendtian Interpretation

by David Antonini
Public Space and Political Experience: An Arendtian Interpretation

Public Space and Political Experience: An Arendtian Interpretation

by David Antonini

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Overview

Contemporary politics is dominated by discussions of rights and liberties as the proper subjects about which citizens should be concerned in the political sphere. In Public Space and Political Experience: An Arendtian Interpretation, David Antonini argues that Hannah Arendt conceived of politics differently and that her thought can help us retrieve a more authentic sense of politics as the site where citizens can speak and act together about matters of shared concern. Antonini shows that citizens can experience politics together if they approach it not as a realm where privately interested individuals compete for their rights or liberties but instead as a space where plural human beings come together as distinct yet equal creatures. Antonini argues that if we read Arendt as primarily concerned with political experience, we can reimagine common political concepts such as freedom, power, revolution, and civil disobedience. The book posits that politics should be considered a fundamental form of human experience, one rooted in what Arendt refers to as the existential condition of politics—human plurality. If plurality is the existential condition out of which our political life emerges, we can enliven and reimagine the possibilities that political life can provide for contemporary citizens.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781793626011
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 04/30/2021
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 170
File size: 593 KB

About the Author

David Antonini is lecturer of philosophy at Clemson University.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Chapter 1: Modernity and the Need of Political Experience

Chapter 2: Arendt’s Phenomenological Concept of Action: Part I

Chapter 3: Arendt’s Phenomenological Concept of Action: Part II

Chapter 4: Arendt’s Political Concept of Action, Part I: Revolution

Chapter 5: Arendt’s Political Concept of Action, Part II: Civil Disobedience

Chapter 6: Political Speech as Horizontal Political Experience: Judgment and Opinion Formation

Conclusion

Bibliography

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