The Origin of the Political: Hannah Arendt or Simone Weil? (Commonalities)

The Origin of the Political: Hannah Arendt or Simone Weil? (Commonalities)

by Gareth Williams (Author), Gareth Williams (Author), Roberto Esposito (Author), Vincenzo Binetti (Author)

Synopsis

In this book Roberto Esposito explores the conceptual trajectories of two of the twentieth century's most vital thinkers of the political: Hannah Arendt and Simone Weil. Taking Homer's Iliad-that great prism through which every gesture has the possibility of becoming public, precisely by being observed by others - as the common origin and point of departure for our understanding of Western philosophical and political traditions, Esposito examines the foundational relation between war and the political.

Drawing actively and extensively on Arendt's and Weil's voluminous writings, but also sparring with thinkers from Marx to Heidegger, The Origin of the Political traverses the relation between polemos and polis, between Greece, Rome, God, force, technicity, evil, and the extension of the Christian imperial tradition, while at the same time delineating the conceptual and hermeneutic ground for the development of Esposito's notion and practice of the impolitical.

In Esposito's account Arendt and Weil emerge in the inverse of the other's thought, in the shadow of the other's light, to think what the thought of the other excludes not as something that is foreign, but rather as something that appears unthinkable and, for that very reason, remains to be thought. Moving slowly toward their conceptualizations of love and heroism, Esposito unravels the West's illusory metaphysical dream of peace, obliging us to reevaluate ceaselessly what it means to be responsible in the wake of past and contemporary forms of war.

$37.92

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 112
Edition: 1
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Published: 03 Apr 2017

ISBN 10: 0823276279
ISBN 13: 9780823276271

Media Reviews
For Esposito, thought does not just fight-it is the fight itself. Esposito moves on the basis of a fundamental ontology of war, which marks what a previous tradition would have called the unity of being. The Origin of the Political elaborates implications of this, not only through its masterful conceptual analysis and through its insights into the two thinkers it studies and critiques, but also because, as it makes explicit the stakes of the impolitical approach, it also ruins so many of the foundations of modern political thought and prepares the way for its fundamental renewal. -- -Alberto Moreiras Texas A&M University
Author Bio
Roberto Esposito is Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at the Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa. His many books in English include Bios: Biopolitics and Philosophy and Two: The Machine of Political Theology and the Place of Thought (Fordham).