- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Philosophy
Full Description
While Giorgio Agamben's work has not previously been categorised as existentialist, his work creatively repackages important existentialist themes in a politico-theological context. This collection of essays offers creative new ways of considering Agamben's critique of the sovereign exception, as well as other existentialist themes, including feminism and postcolonialism. The international range of contributors each challenge, complicate or reimagine Agamben's reading of the sovereign exception, which appears among the writings of Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Sartre, Heidegger, Beauvoir, Fanon, Kafka, Dostoevsky and others in both theistic and atheistic forms.Divided into three sections Agamben and the Sovereign Exception, Agamben and the Death of God and Existentialist Themes in Agamben this collection re-introduces Agamben as an unacknowledged existentialist philosopher who takes the major themes and concepts of existentialism in a startling new direction.
Contents
Introduction: Agamben, Nothingness, ExistentialismMarcos Antonio Norris
Part I: Agamben and the Sovereign Exception
1. The Many Faces of a Hidden God: Agamben's Relations to Kierkegaard ReconsideredLucas Lazzaretti
2. Biopolitics and Probability: Modifications on Life's WayVirgil W. Brower
3. Kierkegaard and the Figure of Form-of-LifeTom Frost
Part II: Agamben and the Death of God
4. The Death of God in Nietzsche and AgambenVanessa Lemm
5. Nietzsche, Heidegger and the End of Metaphysics in Agamben's ThoughtColby Dickinson
6. Sartre and Agamben: Nothingness and the (Apparent) Death of GodJohn Gillespie
Part III: Existentialist Themes in Agamben
7. Death and the Negative in Agamben and BeauvoirBeatrice Marovich
8. Endless Ontology: Agamben and Sartre on DeathAndrew Welch
9. Destituent Potential and Camus's Politics of RebellionTim Christiaens
10. Fanon, Decolonisation and the Being/Praxis RelationSusan Dianne Brophy
11. Dis/Belief in Agamben and de SilentioMarcos Antonio Norris
12. The Existential Situation and Christian Experience: Messianism and Eschatological SalvationDaniel Minch