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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: John Kiess (Loyola University Maryland, USA)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Continuum International Publishing Group Ltd. Dimensions: Width: 13.80cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.332kg ISBN: 9780567222275ISBN 10: 0567222276 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 25 February 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Language: English Table of ContentsTable of Contents Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction Ch. 1 A Public Philosopher: The Life and Thought of Hannah Arendt Ch. 2 The Problem of Evil Reconsidered Ch. 3 Amor Mundi: Worldliness, Love, and Citizenship Ch. 4 That a Beginning Be Made : Natality, Action, and the Politics of Gratitude Ch. 5 In the Region of the Spirit: Thinking Between Past and Future Notes IndexReviewsHannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology. - <i>Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA</i></p><i> </i>The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom. - <i>Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA</i></p> Kiess clearly and wisely explores Arendt s views on evil, plurality, love, thinking, and the birth of the new. He then hints at how these ideas might call Christians to live justly in a broken world. Balancing political realism with an openness to grace is not easy. But Arendt and Kiess propose just such a balance, so that politics becomes the art of being born. Incarnation abounds. -<i>Christian Century</i></p> Hannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology. - <i>Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA</i></p><i> </i>The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom. - <i>Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA</i></p> Kiess clearly and wisely explores Arendt's views on evil, plurality, love, thinking, and the birth of the new. He then hints at how these ideas might call Christians to live justly in a broken world. Balancing political realism with an openness to grace is not easy. But Arendt and Kiess propose just such a balance, so that 'politics becomes the art of being born.' Incarnation abounds. -<i>Christian Century</i></p> Hannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology. - Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom. - Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA .. .masterfully traces out the entire arc of Arendt's oeuvre, developing its ties to Augustine in particular and theology more generally with a breadth and thoughtfulness that can only be hinted at in this review...one encounters here not only an account of Arendt's thought but also its exemplar, of how an active attentiveness to the words and thoughts of one's forebears brings one 'to catch something of their still-living spirit, even if [their experience] only survive[s] in ruined form. - Arendt Studies A readable and engaging book which provides compelling answers to the questions of why and how a theologian might engage with the thought of Hannah Arendt. - Theology Kiess offers a wealth of philosophical and theological perspectives on Arendt, and reading this book whet my appetite to access more of her work. - Regent's Reviews Kiess exercises tact in demonstrating that [Arendt's] early training in theology continued to animate some of her most intriguing and productive concepts, and he exercises courage in showing what those concepts might have to offer to worldly theologies and virtue ethics today. - Political Theology Keiss offers a lucid, well-sourced introduction to the relevance of Hannah Arendt's thought for work at 'the intersection of ecclesiology, radical democracy, and civic virtue' (to quote from Chapter 3)... Those engaged in broader scholarship on Arendt will be particularly interested in his proposal cum question: 'What is Arendt pointing us to if not a politics open to grace?' - CHOICE Kiess clearly and wisely explores Arendt's views on evil, plurality, love, thinking, and the birth of the new. He then hints at how these ideas might call Christians to live justly in a broken world. Balancing political realism with an openness to grace is not easy. But Arendt and Kiess propose just such a balance, so that 'politics becomes the art of being born.' Incarnation abounds. -Christian Century Provides stunning insights to those looking for a broadly religious take on the many problems of power faced by the modern world. Scholars of political theology, philosophical theology, and religious ethics will be well served by returning to Arendt, a thinker for our age, with John Kiess as their guide. -Reading Religion An overall superb elucidation and development of theological connections in Arendt. Beyond being an overview, Hannah Arendt and Theology will serve any familiar or unfamiliar student as an excellent compass for navigating Arendt's stormy and sublime thought on the human condition, in all of its religious complexities. -Toronto Journal of Theology Hannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology. - Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom. - Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA Hannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology. - Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom. - Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA Kiess clearly and wisely explores Arendt's views on evil, plurality, love, thinking, and the birth of the new. He then hints at how these ideas might call Christians to live justly in a broken world. Balancing political realism with an openness to grace is not easy. But Arendt and Kiess propose just such a balance, so that 'politics becomes the art of being born.' Incarnation abounds. -Christian Century Provides stunning insights to those looking for a broadly religious take on the many problems of power faced by the modern world. Scholars of political theology, philosophical theology, and religious ethics will be well served by returning to Arendt, a thinker for our age, with John Kiess as their guide. -Reading Religion An overall superb elucidation and development of theological connections in Arendt. Beyond being an overview, Hannah Arendt and Theology will serve any familiar or unfamiliar student as an excellent compass for navigating Arendt's stormy and sublime thought on the human condition, in all of its religious complexities. -Toronto Journal of Theology.. .masterfully traces out the entire arc of Arendt's oeuvre, developing its ties to Augustine in particular and theology more generally with a breadth and thoughtfulness that can only be hinted at in this review...one encounters here not only an account of Arendt's thought but also its exemplar, of how an active attentiveness to the words and thoughts of one's forebears brings one 'to catch something of their still-living spirit, even if [their experience] only survive[s] in ruined form. - Arendt Studies Kiess clearly and wisely explores Arendt's views on evil, plurality, love, thinking, and the birth of the new. He then hints at how these ideas might call Christians to live justly in a broken world. Balancing political realism with an openness to grace is not easy. But Arendt and Kiess propose just such a balance, so that 'politics becomes the art of being born.' Incarnation abounds.Christian Century The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom.Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA Hannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology.Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA Hannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology. - Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom. - Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA Kiess clearly and wisely explores Arendt s views on evil, plurality, love, thinking, and the birth of the new. He then hints at how these ideas might call Christians to live justly in a broken world. Balancing political realism with an openness to grace is not easy. But Arendt and Kiess propose just such a balance, so that politics becomes the art of being born. Incarnation abounds. - Christian Century Hannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology. - Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom. - Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA Kiess clearly and wisely explores Arendt's views on evil, plurality, love, thinking, and the birth of the new. He then hints at how these ideas might call Christians to live justly in a broken world. Balancing political realism with an openness to grace is not easy. But Arendt and Kiess propose just such a balance, so that 'politics becomes the art of being born.' Incarnation abounds. -Christian Century Provides stunning insights to those looking for a broadly religious take on the many problems of power faced by the modern world. Scholars of political theology, philosophical theology, and religious ethics will be well served by returning to Arendt, a thinker for our age, with John Kiess as their guide. -Reading Religion An overall superb elucidation and development of theological connections in Arendt. Beyond being an overview, Hannah Arendt and Theology will serve any familiar or unfamiliar student as an excellent compass for navigating Arendt's stormy and sublime thought on the human condition, in all of its religious complexities. -Toronto Journal of Theology This is a good book. Its advertised purpose is to correct a one-sidedness in Hannah Arendt's construction and totalitarianism: namely that Arendt reflects very deeply on animating logic of totalitarianism's perpetrators, but curiously little on the perspective of the victims. Viewed in larger perspective, this book also contributes to an ongoing discussion. That is a discussion in which Arendt's voice is fundamental, and which concerns we ought to interpret the significance of the institution of the concentration camp - both for the practice of totalitarianism and, indeed, for modernity at large. - Arendt Studies Kiess clearly and wisely explores Arendt's views on evil, plurality, love, thinking, and the birth of the new. He then hints at how these ideas might call Christians to live justly in a broken world. Balancing political realism with an openness to grace is not easy. But Arendt and Kiess propose just such a balance, so that 'politics becomes the art of being born.' Incarnation abounds.Christian Century The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom.Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA Hannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology.Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA Hannah Arendt had a gift for reframing questions about how we should live in a way that forced us to rethink what we thought we knew. This makes her work essential, but it does not make it easy to understand. We are, therefore, very fortunate to have this extraordinary book by John Kiess. Writing with grace and clarity, Kiess draws on a wide range of other literature to help us understand the interrelation of Arendt's basic concepts and the importance of her work for theology. - Stanley Hauerwas, Duke Divinity School, USA The temptation to 'theologize' Arendt is both difficult to resist and prone to distortion given her complicated (and often implicit) engagement with theology and its traditional concerns. We have long needed a more comprehensive, integrated, and dialogical reading of Arendt and theology. John Kiess has given us that book. Readers of Arendt, and readers of Christian theology, will benefit from this learned yet accessible book that is rich in detail and wisdom. - Eric Gregory, Princeton University, USA Kiess clearly and wisely explores Arendt s views on evil, plurality, love, thinking, and the birth of the new. He then hints at how these ideas might call Christians to live justly in a broken world. Balancing political realism with an openness to grace is not easy. But Arendt and Kiess propose just such a balance, so that politics becomes the art of being born. Incarnation abounds. - Christian Century Author InformationJohn Kiess is Assistant Professor of Theology at Loyola University Maryland, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |