Hannah Arendt and the Fragility of Human Dignity
- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2017
Summary
Professor John Douglas Macready offers a post-foundational account of human dignity by way of a reconstructive reading of Hannah Arendt. He argues that Arendt’s experience of political violence and genocide in the twentieth century, as well as her experience as a stateless person, led her to rethink human dignity as an intersubjective event of political experience. By tracing the contours of Arendt’s thoughts on human dignity, Professor Macready offers convincing evidence that Arendt was engaged in retrieving the political experience that gave rise to the concept of human dignity in order to move beyond the traditional accounts of human dignity that relied principally on the status and stature of human beings. This allowed Arendt to retrofit the concept for a new political landscape and reconceive human dignity in terms of stance—how human beings stand in relationship to one another. Professor Macready elucidates Arendt’s latent political ontology as a resource for developing strictly political account of human dignity hat he calls conditional dignity—the view that human dignity is dependent on political action, namely, the preservation and expression of dignity by the person, and/or the recognition by the political community. He argues that it is precisely this “right” to have a place in the world—the right to belong to a political community and never to be reduced to the status of stateless animality—that indicates the political meaning of human dignity in Arendt’s political philosophy.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2017
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-4985-5489-3
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-4985-5490-9
- Publisher
- Lexington, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 135
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Foreword No access
- Acknowledgments No access
- Sigla for Texts by Hannah Arendt No access
- Introduction No access Pages 1 - 10
- 1 The Quest for a Political Measure of Human Dignity No access Pages 11 - 42
- 2 Rethinking Human Dignity in Dark Times No access Pages 43 - 68
- 3 The Worldliness of Human Dignity No access Pages 69 - 90
- 4 Conditional Dignity and Political Personhood No access Pages 91 - 108
- 5 The Right to a Place in the World No access Pages 109 - 118
- Bibliography No access Pages 119 - 130
- Index No access Pages 131 - 134
- About the Author No access Pages 135 - 135





