Augustine and the Limits of Politics
89 pages
English

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89 pages
English

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Description

Now with a new foreword by Patrick J. Deneen.

Jean Bethke Elshtain brings Augustine's thought into the contemporary political arena and presents an Augustine who created a complex moral map that offers space for loyalty, love, and care, as well as a chastened form of civic virtue. The result is a controversial book about one of the world's greatest and most complex thinkers whose thought continues to haunt all of Western political philosophy. What is our business "within this common mortal life?" Augustine asks and bids us to ask ourselves. What can Augustine possibly have to say about the conditions that characterize our contemporary society and appear to put democracy in crisis? Who is Augustine for us now and what do his words have to do with political theory? These are the underlying questions that animate Jean Bethke Elshtain's fascinating engagement with the thought and work of Augustine, the ancient thinker who gave no political theory per se and refused to offer up a positive utopia. In exploring the questions, Why Augustine, why now?

Elshtain argues that Augustine's great works display a canny and scrupulous attunement to the here and now and the very real limits therein. She discusses other aspects of Augustine's thought as well, including his insistence that no human city can be modeled on the heavenly city, and further elaborates on Hannah Arendt's deep indebtedness to Augustine's understanding of evil. Elshtain also presents Augustine's arguments against the pridefulness of philosophy, thereby linking him to later currents in modern thought, including Wittgenstein and Freud.


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Publié par
Date de parution 30 avril 2018
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780268161149
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

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Augustine and the Limits of Politics
CATHOLIC IDEAS FOR A SECULAR WORLD
O. Carter Snead, series editor
The purpose of this interdisciplinary series is to feature authors from around the world who will expand the influence of Catholic thought on the most important conversations in academia and the public square. The series is “Catholic” in the sense that the books will emphasize and engage the enduring themes of human dignity and flourishing, the common good, truth, beauty, justice, and freedom in ways that reflect and deepen principles affirmed by the Catholic Church for millennia. It is not limited to Catholic authors or even works that explicitly take Catholic principles as a point of departure. Its books are intended to demonstrate the diversity and enhance the relevance of these enduring themes and principles in numerous subjects, ranging from the arts and humanities to the sciences.
Augustine and the Limits
— of Politics —
Jean Bethke Elshtain
Foreword by Patrick J. Deneen
University of Notre Dame Press
Notre Dame, Indiana
Copyright © 2018 by the University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, Indiana 46556
undpress.nd.edu
All Rights Reserved
Published in the United States of America
First edition published in 1995
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Elshtain, Jean Bethke, 1941–2013, author.
Title: Augustine and the limits of politics / Jean Bethke Elshtain ; foreword by Patrick J. Deneen.
Description: Notre Dame : University of Notre Dame Press, 2018. | Series: Catholic ideas for a secular world | Originally published: c1995. | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
Identifiers: LCCN 2018031026 (print) | LCCN 2018031165 (ebook) | ISBN 9780268074524 (pdf) | ISBN 9780268161149 (epub) | ISBN 9780268006457 (hardback : alk. paper) | ISBN 0268006458 (hardback : alk. paper) | ISBN 9780268020019 (pbk.)
Subjects: LCSH: Augustine, of Hippo, Saint, 354–430—Political and social views. | Christianity and politics. | Christianity and politics—History of doctrines—Early church, ca. 30-600.
Classification: LCC BR1720.A9 (ebook) | LCC BR1720.A9 E57 2018 (print) | DDC 320.092—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018031026
∞ This book is printed on acid-free paper.
This e-Book was converted from the original source file by a third-party vendor. Readers who notice any formatting, textual, or readability issues are encouraged to contact the publisher at ebooks@nd.edu
To those who taught me well .
Behold, and again see if you can. Certainly you love only the good, because the earth is good by the height of its mountains, the moderate elevation of its hills, and the evenness of its fields; and good is the farm that is pleasant and fertile; and good is the house that is arranged throughout in symmetrical proportions and is spacious and bright; and good are the animals, animate bodies; and good is the mild and salubrious air; and good is the food that is pleasant and conducive to health; and good is health without pains and weariness; and good is the countenance of man with regular features, a cheerful expression, and a glowing color; and good is the soul of a friend with the sweetness of concord and the fidelity of love; and good is the just man; and good are riches because they readily assist us; and good is the heaven with its own sun, moon, and stars; and good are the angels by their holy obedience; and good is the lecture that graciously instructs and suitably admonishes the listener; and good is the poem with its measured rhythm and the seriousness of its thoughts.
Augustine, De Trinitate
—— CONTENTS ——
Foreword to the 2018 Edition
Preface: A Village of the Mind
1. Why Augustine? Why Now?
2. The Earthly City and Its Discontents
3. Against the Pridefulness of Philosophy
4. Augustine’s Evil; Arendt’s Eichmann
5. “Our business within this common mortal life”: Augustine and a Politics of Limits
Epilogue: Loving Crazy Horse and Augustine
Notes
Bibliographical Note
Index
—— FOREWORD TO THE 2018 EDITION ——
Jean Bethke Elshtain and the Limits of Political Theory
A Preface to Augustine and the Limits of Politics
We live again in the most Augustinian of times. Confusion and unsettlement about current political arrangements are pervasive, with a widespread sense of gloom about the prospects for continued stability, peace, and prosperity. The period of Pax Americana is aging toward senescence, and voices from every direction on the political spectrum express plausible scenarios of a post-liberal future with alternating tones of hope and fear.
While our political condition is not yet quite as dramatic as those during the years when Augustine lived, from 386–430—with the sack of Rome in 410 by invading armies from the north marking the decisive beginning of the end of a seemingly eternal empire—still, the American empire seems to be undergoing a similar internal decay manifested in political corruption, spiritual ennui, and titanic economic inequality. Parallels between Rome and America have always been popular—even the Founding Fathers encouraged the comparison—but now, more often than not, it’s not Rome’s power and world-girdling rule that inspires comparisons, but its civilization-shattering decline and fall.
For all the radical differences between our age and Augustine’s, he would likely feel at home in our age of political uncertainty and fraying civic confidence. His answer to this condition, now as then, would be much the same. He would point to the unchanging demands of the biblical faith he came to embrace as an adult, both setting sights high for one’s divine home while lowering expectations for the earthly realm. Yet it’s fair to say that it would take him some time to recognize the difference in today’s audience, one likely far less Christian and, even then, far more worldly than the audience he was accustomed to addressing. His diagnosis and prescription remain invaluable, but his way of thinking and speaking are more difficult for modern ears to hear.
Fortunately, we have a masterful modern translator on hand. That updated answer was distilled over twenty years ago for a modern audience by the political theorist and public intellectual Jean Bethke Elshtain in her Loyola Covey Lectures and subsequent book, Augustine and the Limits of Politics . Her book is arguably more needful now than even when it was written in the mid-1990s, in retrospect a time of relative stability, prosperity, and even national confidence. Her effort to distill Augustine’s political message was more prophetic than even she might have anticipated, though she knew better than most that Augustine’s teachings are perennial and will never expire as long as humans remain all-too-human.
A Theological-Political Turn
The year 1995 was a banner one for Jean Bethke Elshtain. During that year she concluded her academic appointment at Vanderbilt University, where she had been the first woman to hold an endowed chair. Later in that year, she began teaching at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago where, until her death in 2013, she held the Laura Spelman Rockefeller Chair in Social and Political Ethics. She had gained widespread notice due to the 1994 publication of her bestselling book Democracy on Trial , which was issued in paperback in that subsequent year. Also in 1995, the University of Notre Dame Press published her revised Loyola Covey Lectures, Augustine and the Limits of Politics , which she had ­delivered in 1994.
Organized over some twenty years at Loyola University in Chicago, the Covey Lectures hosted an extraordinary list of speakers from the first rank of political theory and intellectual history, many of whom went on to publish important books arising from those lectures. Among the speakers that were hosted under its auspice were Michael Walzer, Benjamin Barber, Theodore Lowi, Tracy Strong, and Michael Zuckert. Jean Bethke Elshtain was among the small number of women who were invited, and she used the occasion to extend her scholarship into a wholly new and seemingly unfashionable area of inquiry: political theology. As with much of her previous work, her interest proved to be prescient, occupying vitally important intellectual space well in advance of many who would arrive later and moreover in ways that remained relevant not only because she was among the first to stake a claim but also because she was invariably the most pene­trating and insightful.
Elshtain had made her name initially for books published on the status—or, too often, lack of status—of women in the history of Western political thought. Her 1981 book Public Man, Private Woman was an early contribution on a subject now well established in political theory: the relative absence of public role or political presence for women throughout the long history of political thought and, more, the way that Western political thought had been predicated on this absence. She followed this book with Meditations on Modern Political Thought: Masculine/Feminine Themes from Luther to Arendt and a host of essays and articles on feminist topics that were eventually collected in her 1997 collection of essays, Real Politics: At the Center of Everyday Life . In these writings, Elshtain displayed a fierce independence from academic trends, at once blazing a new course in the creation of feminist approaches to political philosophy while also willingly criticizing aspects of femi­nist thinking that she believed to be ultimately destructive of the prospects for shared political and civic life, particularly a radicalized feminism that she believed dangerously attacked the family as the root of all social and political oppression. 1
Her subsequent work branched out into areas where few women worked, particularly theories of war and peace, with a special interest in ethical dimensions of these questions that gave rise to a series of works on Just War theory. Among her more powerful reflections were those on th

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